COMPREHENSIVE HUMAN CASE STUDY
CLASS 6512 | 2026 EDITION | WEEK #9 | A+ UPGRADED —
EXPERT LEVEL
MORE FREQUENT SEVERE HEADACHES
26-YEAR-OLD PATIENT — COMPLETE CLINICAL CASE
REVIEW
Best-in-Class Documentation | Expert Peer Review | March 2026
60-PAGE EXPANDED REFERENCE EDITION
Case ID Patient Age Primary Dx ICD-10 Grade Week
6512-W9-26 26 Years Migraine NOS G43.909 A+ #
CONFIDENTIAL — EDUCATIONAL USE ONLYCase 6512-W9-2026 | 26yo Severe Headache A+ GRADE
,HUMAN CASE STUDY | CLASS 6512 | WEEK #9 | 2026 60-PAGE EDITION | A+ EXPERT REVIEW
TABLE OF CONTENTS
§ SECTION TITLE PAGE
1 Patient Demographics & Administrative Data 3
2 Reason for Encounter & Chief Complaint 4
3 History of Present Illness — OPQRST Analysis 5
4 Associated Symptoms & Full Review of Systems 7
5 Past Medical, Surgical & Family History 9
6 Medications, Allergies & Substance Use 11
7 Physical Examination & Neurological Assessment 13
8 Diagnostic Workup — Laboratory & Imaging 16
9 Pathophysiology of Migraine — In-Depth Review 19
10 Differential Diagnosis — Ranked & Explained 23
11 Diagnostic Criteria — ICHD-3 Classification 26
12 Final Working Diagnosis & ICD-10 Coding 28
13 Pharmacological Management — Acute & Preventive 30
14 Non-Pharmacological & Integrative Management 35
15 Special Populations & Comorbidity Management 38
16 Medication Overuse Headache — Deep Dive 40
17 Evidence-Based Medicine Review 43
18 Referrals, Follow-Up & Monitoring Plan 46
19 Patient Education & Counseling 48
20 Prognosis, Outcomes & Quality of Life 51
21 Nursing & Allied Health Care Considerations 53
22 Ethical, Legal & Documentation Standards 55
23 Case Summary & Clinical Learning Objectives 57
24 Expert Examiner Notes & A+ Grade Review 59
CONFIDENTIAL — EDUCATIONAL USE ONLYCase 6512-W9-2026 | 26yo Severe Headache A+ GRADE
,HUMAN CASE STUDY | CLASS 6512 | WEEK #9 | 2026 60-PAGE EDITION | A+ EXPERT REVIEW
SECTION 1 — PATIENT DEMOGRAPHICS & ADMINISTRATIVE
DATA
1.1 Patient Identification & Administrative Details
FIELD DETAILS
Case Reference Number 6512-W9-2026-H
Patient Identifier P-26-MHC-2026
Age at Presentation 26 years
Biological Sex Not specified (case-neutral de-identified)
Ethnicity Not disclosed (de-identified per HIPAA)
Occupation Graduate student / Young professional
Primary Language English
Insurance / Coverage Active health coverage — primary care plan
Marital Status Single
Living Situation Shares apartment; moderate social support
Educational Level University graduate / postgraduate
Emergency Contact On file — immediate family
Referring Physician General Practitioner (Primary Care Physician)
Encounter Setting Outpatient Neurology Clinic
Date of Encounter March 2026 — Week 9
Documentation Level Comprehensive / Expert Review
Case Grade A+ Upgraded — Best-in-Class Reference
1.2 Encounter Type & Setting Details
Encounter Type: Scheduled outpatient clinic visit; non-emergent
Triaged As: Moderate priority — chronic progressive headache worsening
Appointment Duration: 60-minute comprehensive new patient neurological evaluation
Documentation Type: Full H&P (History & Physical) with problem-oriented SOAP note
Clinicians Present: Attending Neurologist, Neurology Resident (PGY-2), Medical Student
Interpreter Required: No — patient communicates fluently in English
Consents Obtained: Verbal and written informed consent for examination and documentation
1.3 Reason for Referral — GP Summary
The referring general practitioner noted progressive worsening of headache frequency and severity
over the preceding three to six months. The patient presented to the GP clinic on two prior occasions
CONFIDENTIAL — EDUCATIONAL USE ONLYCase 6512-W9-2026 | 26yo Severe Headache A+ GRADE
, HUMAN CASE STUDY | CLASS 6512 | WEEK #9 | 2026 60-PAGE EDITION | A+ EXPERT REVIEW
requesting stronger analgesics. OTC medications were deemed insufficient, and the pattern of
escalating frequency prompted specialist referral. No imaging had been performed at the time of
referral.
SECTION 2 — REASON FOR ENCOUNTER & CHIEF COMPLAINT
CHIEF COMPLAINT (Patient's Own Words): "My headaches have become so much more
frequent and way more severe — they are ruining my life."
2.1 Complaint Characterization
Primary Complaint: Increasing frequency and severity of headache episodes
Duration of Complaint: Progressive worsening over past 3–6 months
Functional Impact: Missing classes/work, reduced social activity, impaired concentration
Patient's Primary Fear: "Something serious is wrong with my brain" — anxiety-driven health concern
Urgency Level: Moderate-High — warrants urgent specialist evaluation
Prior Interventions: OTC ibuprofen, acetaminophen — partially effective; tolerance developing
2.2 Headache Frequency Timeline
TIME PERIOD FREQUENCY SEVERITY (VAS)
6 months ago 1–2 per month 3–5/10 (mild-moderate)
3–4 months ago 1–2 per week 5–7/10 (moderate)
1–2 months ago 3–4 per week 6–8/10 (moderate-severe)
Current (Week 9) 4–6 per week 7–9/10 (severe)
Average episode duration 6–24 hours Peak at 4–8 hours
Longest single episode Up to 72 hours Bedridden — unable to work
2.3 Impact on Activities of Daily Living (ADLs)
• Academic performance: Missed 6 lectures and 2 examinations due to headache in the past
month
• Occupational: Reduced productivity; difficulty meeting deadlines; 3 sick days taken
• Social: Cancelled social engagements, avoided parties due to light/noise sensitivity
• Physical: Unable to exercise on headache days; avoids outdoor activities
• Sleep: Headaches both disrupt sleep and are triggered by poor sleep — vicious cycle
documented
• Mental health: Significant worry about headache etiology; PHQ-2 screen positive
• Quality of life (MIDAS score estimate): Grade IV — Severe Disability
CONFIDENTIAL — EDUCATIONAL USE ONLYCase 6512-W9-2026 | 26yo Severe Headache A+ GRADE