Headache with a little nausea

For a headache with nausea, the patient should take into account his or her medical history and other symptoms to analyze the condition and decide whether to go to the hospital. If the patient has a history of migraine headache and the headache is nauseous, it may be a recurrence of migraine headache, and the patient can take symptomatic oral pain medications, such as aminoglutethimide tablets and zolmitriptan tablets, to relieve the headache. If you have no previous history of headache, but suddenly have a headache with nausea, even with physical inactivity and clumsy speech, you should consult a hospital promptly because it may be caused by cerebral hemorrhage or cerebrovascular disease. If the headache is caused by a cold and fever, you can take symptomatic oral antipyretic and analgesic drugs to relieve the headache and reduce fever, and nausea can also be relieved by taking oral acetaminophen tablets or ibuprofen extended-release capsules.