| Literature DB >> 19337450 |
Abstract
Despite its high prevalence and individual as well as societal burden, migraine remains underdiagnosed and undertreated. In recent years, the options for the management of migraine patients have greatly expanded. A number of drugs belonging to various pharmacological classes and deliverable by several routes are now available both for the acute and the preventive treatments of migraine. Nevertheless, disability and satisfaction remain low in many subjects because treatments are not accessible, not optimized, not effective, or simply not tolerated. There is thus still considerable room for better education, for more efficient therapies and for greater support from national health systems. In spite of useful internationally accepted guidelines, anti-migraine treatment has to be individually tailored to each patient taking into account the migraine subtype, the ensuing disability, the patient's previous history and present expectations, and the co-morbid disorders. In this article we will summarize the phenotypic presentations of migraine and review recommendations for acute and preventive treatment, highlighting recent advances which are relevant for clinical practice in terms of both diagnosis and management.Entities:
Keywords: acute treatment; disability; management; migraine; preventive treatment
Year: 2008 PMID: 19337450 PMCID: PMC2646639 DOI: 10.2147/ndt.s3045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Diagnostic criteria for migraine with and without aura and for chronic migraine
At least 5 attacks fulfilling criteria B-D Headache attacks lasting 4–72 hours (untreated or unsuccessfully treated) Headache has at least two of the following characteristics: unilateral location pulsating quality moderate or severe pain intensity aggravation by or causing avoidance of routine physical activity ( During headache at least one of the following: nausea and/or vomiting photophobia and phonophobia Not attributed to another disorder |
At least 2 attacks fulfilling criteria B–D Aura consisting of at least one of the following visual symptoms including positive features ( sensory symptoms including positive features ( dysphasic speech disturbance At least two of the following: homonymous visual symptoms and/or unilateral sensory symptoms at least one aura symptom develops gradually over ≥5 minutes and/or different aura symptoms occur in succession over ≥5 minutes each symptom lasts ≥5 and ≤60 minutes Headache fulfilling criteria B-D for 1.1 Not attributed to another disorder |
Current or prior headache fulfils criteria for 1.1 Headache on ≥15 days a month At least 8 headache days a month for the previous 3 months fulfilling at least one of he following: Criteria C and D for 1.1 Criteria C and D for 1.1 Headache that the patient believes to be migraine and is relieved by a 5-HT1B/1D receptor agonist Not attributable to another disorder, including medication overuse headache |
Figure 1An algorithm for “stratified” and “step-wise within attack” treatment of migraine attacks, inspired from personal experience and the Belgian pharmacoeconomic situation as well as from the available literature (see reviews by Evers et al 2006; Goadsby et al 2006).
Figure 2Therapeutic gain in migraine preventive treatment (% of “responders”, with a reduction of minimum 50% of attacks).
Preventive treatments in migraine
| Agents and doses | Selected adverse events |
|---|---|
| β-blockers (q.d.) Propranolol: 40–160 mg bisoprolol: 2.5–10 mg Metoprolol: 50–200 mg | Reduced energy, tiredness, postural hypotension, bronchoconstriction, |
| Valproic acid/sodium valproate 500–1000 mg qd (sustained release) | Sedation, nausea, weight gain, tremor, hair loss, Liver toxicity, teratogenicity |
| Topiramate 25–100 mg bid | Paresthesias, fatigue, dysgeusia, nausea, cognitive dysfunction, depression |
| Flunarizine 5–10 mg qd | Weight gain, depression, drowsiness, parkinsonism |
| Methysergide 1–4 mg bid | Drowsiness, leg cramps, weight gain, Fibrosis (except if 1 month drug holiday every 6 months) |
| Amitriptyline 25–75 mg qd | Weight gain, dry mouth, sedation, drowsiness |
| Riboflavin 400 mg qd | |
| Coenzyme Q10 100 mg tid | |
| Lisinopril 10–20 mg q.d. | Cough |
| Candesartan 16 mg qd | |
| Magnesium 24–30 mmol qd | Abdominal cramps, diarrhea |
Figure 3An algorithm for “stratified” and “step-wise” preventive anti-migraine treatment based on available data on efficacy/tolerance ratios and on personal experience.