Clinically, about 30% of patients with gliomas present with headache symptoms, of which about 70% have progressively worsening headaches. This kind of headache is characterized by: most of them are not specific, just presenting intermittent, mostly located on the same side of the lesion, mostly presenting as dull pain rather than throbbing pain, and sometimes not easy to distinguish from tension headache. The specific manifestations of headache also vary according to the site of occurrence. Cerebral gliomas usually present as pain in the forehead, while cerebellar gliomas tend to present as pain in the occipital and neck regions. If the tumor is too large and produces high intracranial pressure, the headache is significantly worse, sometimes waking up with pain during sleep, and significantly worse during vigorous head movements, sometimes accompanied by nausea and vomiting. If the intracranial hypertension lasts for too long, there will also be loss of vision. When the above headache symptoms occur, it is necessary to go to the hospital in time for examination.