Back left side of head hurts to touch

Tension headaches are very common and most people get them. You can treat them yourself with painkillers but see a GP if you have several headaches a week or they're severe.

Check if it's a tension headache

Common symptoms of tension headaches include:

  • pain on both sides of your head, face or neck
  • feeling like something is pressing on your head or being tightened around it
  • the affected area may feel tender and your head may hurt more when touched

You should be able to continue doing daily activities without making the headache worse.

Tension headaches last at least 30 minutes but they can last much longer, sometimes for several days.

Causes of tension headaches

Common causes of tension headaches include:

  • stress
  • sleep problems
  • caffeine

Taking painkillers for headaches too often or for a long time can also cause headaches. These are known as overuse or rebound headaches.

Tension headaches are not a sign of an underlying condition.

How to ease a tension headache

There are some things you can do to treat a tension headache yourself.

Do

  • use painkillers like paracetamol, aspirin and ibuprofen – paracetamol is the first choice of painkiller if you're pregnant, and children under 16 should not take aspirin

  • try doing activities to help you relax like exercise, yoga and massage

  • try changing your sleeping habits if sleep problems like insomnia may be causing your headaches

  • try using a low, firm pillow and heat or cold packs if you have neck pain and headaches

  • try to stay at home and avoid contact with other people if you have a high temperature or you do not feel well enough to do your normal activities

Don’t

  • do not have, or cut down on, drinks with caffeine in them like tea, coffee or cola

A pharmacist can help with headaches

You can ask a pharmacist about:

  • the best painkiller to take, if you're not sure which is suitable for you
  • what to do if you're pregnant – some medicines (like ibuprofen) are not recommended in pregnancy
  • medicines for sleep problems like insomnia if you're having trouble sleeping and you think it may be causing your headaches

Find a pharmacy

Non-urgent advice: See a GP if:

  • you get headaches several times a week or they're severe
  • painkillers and activities to help you relax do not help your headaches
  • you have a throbbing pain at the front or on 1 side of your head
  • you feel sick, vomit and find light or noise painful

These can be signs of a different type of headache, such as a migraine or cluster headache.

What we mean by severe pain

Severe pain:

  • always there and so bad it's hard to think or talk
  • you cannot sleep
  • it's very hard to move, get out of bed, go to the bathroom, wash or dress

Moderate pain:

  • always there
  • makes it hard to concentrate or sleep
  • you can manage to get up, wash or dress

Mild pain:

  • comes and goes
  • is annoying but does not stop you doing daily activities

What happens at your GP appointment

If you have regular tension headaches, a GP may suggest you keep a headache diary to record details of your headaches like:

  • how often you get them and how long they last
  • how painful they are and any other symptoms you have
  • possible causes
  • any medicines you take to help

The GP may advise you about taking painkillers for tension headaches, such as when to take medicine and how often you should take it.

You may be referred to a specialist if painkillers and activities like exercise do not help reduce your headaches or if it's not clear what's causing them.

Preventing tension headaches

If you get tension headaches regularly, you may be offered a course of acupuncture.

An antidepressant medicine called amitriptyline is also sometimes recommended to help prevent tension headaches.

You'll be prescribed a low-dose to start with, which may later be increased. The medicine usually needs to be taken for several months before it starts working.

Page last reviewed: 04 March 2022
Next review due: 04 March 2025

How does Pain happen in your Brain?

By Chris Fawcett 24 Apr, 2022

When it comes to pain, and when it comes to the way that pain is processed, one thing that you might not know is that pain is 100% produced by your brain. So, even though you feel it in a particular body part, it's your brain that produces the feeling of pain. Pain is like another sense. There's a lot of information that comes in through our senses, through our eyes, our ears, our skin, and so forth. It's the brain's job to process all of those signals, before you then experience what you might see as a colour, what you might hear as a sound, what you might feel as a sensation. The experience of pain can be different for everybody. This is why some people feel pain more than others; why some people can have a very minor feeling, as opposed to others that have a major feeling, to the same input. Let me explain briefly what goes on when you have pain... You have a whole stack of nerves that go into your spinal cord. All of these nerves, for example the ones that run from your hand, your feet, are what we call the peripheral nerves. They all filter in and meet in the spinal cord. The signal goes up the nerves, up the spinal cord, and then sent up to your brain for processing those signals. So remember, when signals are sent from your body to your spinal cord it's not pain yet, it's not even a feeling yet. It's basically electricity that your body is taking in, through special channels called nociceptors. Your brain then needs to process these signals, along with all of the information that's going on around it at the same time, in order for the "electricity" to become a sensation of any type, like pain. Let's talk about a really easy example. Let's say I am in the kitchen, and I'm cooking, and my finger touches the frying pan... This is what happens in your brain, in real time. My brain goes, "Oh, okay. There's something happening, but I'm not sure what. Let's go through the process." When the finger touches the fry pan, my thermal receptors in my finger start to activate, and sends signals up my nerve, into my spinal cord, and then shoots up through my spinal cord and up to my brain. My brain then asks the question, "What does this mean? What happens here?" Then, my brain starts to take in some more information about what's going on around the place, to form a decision: Visual Cortex: "What am I looking at right now?" "Well, My finger is touching a black shiny surface, next to some bacon, I'm in the kitchen, there's fire underneath this shiny glass surface." Auditory Cortex: "What am I hearing?" "I'm hearing the crackling of the bacon underneath it, hearing a couple of birds outside in the kitchen, but it's mostly the crackling that I'm hearing." Planning Cortex: "What am I doing tomorrow?" "I need to have these fingers for tomorrow for work, it's actually really important for my fingers to be working" Past Memory Cortex: "What do we remember about situations like this?" "My mum burnt her finger like this years ago, and she would not stop complaining about it, there was a blister on her finger, it must have really hurt." My brain takes in all of the information! From the nociceptors coming from my finger, all of these other inputs, pretty much everything that can possibly be causing a physical issue, and everything that's going on in, and around you. The brain then asks a very important question: Do I need pain now? Or do I not need pain now? My brain will go, "Hey, this is potentially dangerous. So therefore pain is the outcome." That is the decision, and that’s what is going to happen. What's important to note – is that this whole process from the signals going up your nerves and into your brain, happens EXTREMELY fast. So, the response after all of that is ‘ouch!’ and my brain has decided to change my behaviour and take the finger out of the frying pan. That’s normal pain. That's how normal pain generally works to protect us, so that we're not stepping on roads and burning our feet, we're not chopping our fingers off, we're not getting frostbite at the end of our nose, and we're not doing things that are actually, inherently dangerous to us, because pain protects us from danger. Now, I know what you're thinking, what's happening with people that have pain all the time, or what's happening when you have pain that's there when it's inconvenient, and it's not useful anymore? You might've hurt yourself 5 - 10 years ago, and now you're getting pain all the time - it might be after a car accident, it might be after hurting your back a long time ago, and yet the pain is still there. What we now know is that persistent pain is less about tissue damage, and more about the sensitivity of your system. When we've got a bit of sensitivity in the system, what can happen is that the spinal cord can crank up the signal by up to 100 times. It's like you get a normal signal coming in, and then this other signal comes up that’s much stronger than what it should be. With all things being equal, your brain is going to look at that signal and go, "Wow, that's a really big signal." It's then going to go, "Wow, this is dangerous." Therefore, we're going to get some pain as a result of that. What can also happen, is your brain may decide the signal is dangerous for an illogical, or an irrational reason. It’s important to know, that it's not your doing. For example, this might be why you're able to do some gardening, but the moment you vacuum, your back is really sore. This is caused by the context under which you're doing it. The vacuuming, for whatever reason, is causing your brain to say "Yeah, I don't like that" and give you pain as the output, but gardening may be more "Yeah, I enjoy this!" When everything should be normal - there's normal movement, the past injury has healed and scans are clear, but this awful pain is still there - means the signals coming in are being cranked up in the spinal cord, and causing a sensitization process to occur. The third thing that can happen is, a relatively normal signal comes in, but there are other contexts that are coming into your system which are tricking your brain into giving pain when it doesn't really need it. It’s very important to understand the pain that you're experiencing is very real, however the reason why your pain is there, may be different to what you think that it might be. Most of the people we treat here at The Headache and Pain Management Centre have one of two things, when it comes to their long-term, undiagnosed, pain condition. The first thing is: most people have been to see everyone and have tried everything. They’ve been to a physio, chiro, doctor, and tried all of these different treatment methods, so much so that they start to believe their pain will never go away. A lot of the time, when it comes to Headache and Migraine, it might be a stiff joint in the neck that hasn't been moved in the right way, or in a neck or low back, it could be a muscle that hasn't had the treatment that it has needed. It's unfortunately, somewhat common for these things to be missed. This is why we always do a full assessment on all the things that might be causing the issue. Often by removing the issue, things are much better. However, more commonly, when people that have fibromyalgia, chronic regional pain syndrome, post whiplash or persistent low back pain, it's more this sensitization process that's happening which we explained above. Instead of being able to remove the issue, we have to focus on doing things to wind th e system down, so that those signals aren't being amplified quite as much. Therefore, by the time the signals get to the brain, it's not as bad and the brain doesn’t send pain inappropriately. Secondly, we need to consider all of the other inputs that are coming in that’s causing your brain to produce pain unnecessarily. Common things that could be causing this, are things like anxiety, or fear. However, the biggest one is probably a lack of knowledge about why their pain is there in the first place. Our brain really likes to have an explanation for why things are happening. A lot of the time, our brains take a shortcut, or they take the information that best suits them, or it could be the repetition of incorrect information that has been given over time. What I can tell you categorically is, this is actually how pain works. To simplify, there's three levels. There's the peripheral, where it's all the nerves going into your spinal cord. So through your arms, your legs and your feet, the skin, things of that nature. There’s the spinal cord, which takes the signals in, and those signals can be amplified. Then there’s the brain, which receives the signals and needs to make a decision - if something is dangerous or if it's not dangerous. If your brain concludes that, based on all the things around it, that it is dangerous, then it will give you pain. Even if the reality is that it's not dangerous… The education around how pain works is really interesting, and for people who do have a long-term chronic pain condition, it's really important to get to know the principles which we have outlined, and really understand it. The more awareness you have about how pain is prescribed and why it has presented in a certain way, the more comfort and control you will have in managing the pain. Whether, that might mean, engaging in movement, a stretch, or perhaps changing your mind set or knowledge base, it’s important that you know what is happening and what can be done to rectify the issue. Which of course, is what we do every single day. We assess, we diagnose, and we organize a treatment plan tailored to you and your needs – to ensure your pain management is on the right pathway to long-term relief. Click here to see if we can help you too.

Why does the back of my skull hurt when I touch it?

Occipital neuralgia happens when there's pressure or irritation to your occipital nerves, maybe because of an injury, tight muscles that entrap the nerves, or inflammation. Many times, doctors can't find a cause for it. Some medical conditions are linked to it, including: Trauma to the back of the head.

Why does the left side of my head hurt when I press on it?

A headache on the left side may result from migraine, vasculitis, cluster headaches, or other types. Often, a person can treat a headache at home with over-the-counter remedies and rest. However, if headaches are severe, persistent, or otherwise concerning, contact a healthcare professional.

Why does my head hurt to touch in one spot?

Migraine headaches cause intense, throbbing head pain. These headaches also can make your nerves so sensitive that even the slightest touch hurts. This is called allodynia, which means "other pain." Up to about 80% of people with this condition have allodynia during an attack.

Do brain tumors cause pain in back of head?

Symptoms that accompany a brain tumor headache double vision, blurred vision, or a loss of vision. increased pressure felt in the back of the head.