Literature DB >> 16109118

Migraine pain location: a tertiary care study of 1283 migraineurs.

Leslie Kelman1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: This study of headache location in migraine was performed (1) to document the location of pain in a large group of migraine patients and (2) to assess the impact of different types of migraine, gender, aura, and headache features on the location of the headache.
BACKGROUND: The literature documenting the location of the pain of acute attack of migraine is sparse.
METHODS: A total of 1283 migraine patients (ICHD, 2004, 1.1, 1.2, 1.5.1, and 1.6) were evaluated at the 1st visit. Headache location and character were graded on a scale of 0 to 3 with 0 being none and 3 the most. Triggers were graded on a frequency scale of 0 to 3; 0 = none; 1 = less than 1/3 of time; 2 = between 1/3 and 2/3 of time; 3 = greater than 2/3 of time. Other headache features and medication responsiveness, were also recorded. Patients were stratified by migraine type and headache frequency. Combined and isolated locations, and the impact of age, gender, headache frequency, migraine types, and aura were addressed. Unremitting headache was excluded.
RESULTS: Migraine patients reported that the highest location frequencies were in the eyes (67.1%), temporal (58.0%), and frontal (55.9%). The lowest were diffusely (17.5%) and vertex (24.1%). The intermediate were in the occipital (39.8%) and neck areas (39.7%). Other migraine types were remarkably similar. Hemi-cranial location was present in 66.6% of patients, 71.2% in episodic migraine and 61.4% in chronic migraine, 67.2% in females and 63.2% in males, 59.7% in migraine without aura and 68.9% in migraine with aura 100% of the time. Headaches were reported on the right side in 27.3%, left side 24.3%, both sides 23.7%, either side 15.0%, and in the middle of the head in 4.6% of cases. Significant differences in headache location were seen only within migraine and not other migraine types. Headache location was not correlated with lifetime duration of migraine, prodrome, response to triptan, intensity, time to peak of headache, recurrence frequency, and time to recurrence.
CONCLUSIONS: This study provides a detailed documentation of headache location in a large cohort of patients. The commonest locations are the orbital, frontal, and temporal areas and least common sites being diffuse and the vertex. A single location is infrequent. Hemi-cranial location is present in two thirds of subjects and a quarter each are on the left side, right side, and both sides. The locations of the headache are very similar in different migraine types, but there are some differences. Under age 21 and older patients tended to show some differences in location and side. Location differences are seen with gender, headache frequency, and aura. Location shows many correlations with triggers and headache features.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 16109118     DOI: 10.1111/j.1526-4610.2005.05185.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Headache        ISSN: 0017-8748            Impact factor:   5.887


  15 in total

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2.  Incidence and Causes of Overdiagnosis of Optic Neuritis.

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3.  Negative predictors of clinical response to triptans in patients with migraine.

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6.  Pain remapping in migraine: a novel characteristic following trigeminal nerve injury.

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7.  Primary Headache Disorders: Focus on Migraine.

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8.  Atypical nummular headache or circumscribed migraine: the utility of pressure algometry.

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9.  Migraine pain location in adult patients from eastern India.

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10.  Neck pain in episodic migraine: premonitory symptom or part of the attack?

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Journal:  J Headache Pain       Date:  2015-09-02       Impact factor: 7.277

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