| Literature DB >> 21499917 |
Marian Gómez-Beldarrain1, María Carrasco, Amaia Bilbao, Juan C García-Moncó.
Abstract
Chronic migraine patients are at risk of developing a medication overuse. Brain functional studies in these patients have demonstrated an orbitofrontal hypometabolism, persistent after overuse cessation. Orbitofrontal dysfunction is also present in addiction and thus could predispose migraineurs to medication overuse. The aim of this study was to investigate if orbitofrontal dysfunction can be demonstrated in patients with chronic migraine and medication overuse by performing a systematic neuropsychological evaluation focused on tests that assess frontal lobe function. Second, to establish whether it is related to the outcome of these patients. We prospectively studied 42 chronic migraine patients with medication overuse, 42 episodic migraineurs and 41 controls on a battery of neuropsychological tasks evaluating the orbitofrontal and dorsolateral functioning. Depression, anxiety, and personality traits were also assessed. Chronic migraineurs with medication overuse showed a significant impairment in orbitofrontal task performance and higher depression scores as compared to episodic migraineurs and controls. Dorsolateral dysfunction was present in both groups of migraneurs, who also had higher rates of anxiety as compared to controls. After 1 year of follow-up, migraine patient's outcome was classified according to their medication overuse status. A negative outcome that included persistent or new-onset medication overuse was present in 34% of migraineurs and was associated with baseline poor orbitofrontal task performance, and with mild dorsolateral dysfunction, higher rates of depression, anxiety and neuroticism-anxiety traits. Formal education and years with migraine did not influence outcome. Orbitofrontal dysfunction is present in patients with chronic migraine and medication overuse, and associates with a poor outcome at 1 year of follow-up. Neuropsychological evaluation in migraine may help to detect patients prone to overuse so that appropriate therapeutic attitudes can be taken.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21499917 PMCID: PMC3139058 DOI: 10.1007/s10194-011-0340-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Demographics and migraine information for patients and controls
| Chronic migraine with drug overuse | Episodic migraine | Controls | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 42 (39) | 42 (35) | 41 (30) |
| Age, mean (SD), years | 41.21 (8.20) | 36.19 (8.66) | 37.12 (8.59) |
| Years of education | <12 years (17) | <12 years (16) | <12 years (9) |
| 12–16 years (16) | 12–16 years (14) | 12–16 years (17) | |
| >16 years (9) | >16 years (12) | >16 years (15) | |
| Years with migraine | <5 years (5) | <5 years (9) | – |
| 5–15 years (13) | 5–15 years (15) | ||
| >15 years (24) | >15 years (18) | ||
| Medication overuse | NSAIDs (21), triptans (3), simple analgesics (4), combination of the above (14) | – | – |
| Preventive medication | Combinationa (15), amitriptyline (4), topiramate (4), zonisamide (1), beta-blockers (3), lamotrigine (1), flunaricine (1), SSRI (2), no treatment (11) | No treatment (26), beta-blockers (7), amitriptyline (7), flunaricine (2) | – |
| Follow-up at 1 year | Overuse persisted (24) | Continued without overuse (35) | – |
| Ceased overuse (16) | Started overuse (3) | ||
| Lost to follow-up (2) | Lost to follow-up (4) |
NSAIDs Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, SSRI selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors
aMore than one drug (valproic acid, zonisamide, topiramate, beta-blockers)
Neuropsychological tests results
| Chronic migraine with drug overuse ( | Episodic migraine ( | Controls ( |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Orbitofrontal tasks | ||||
| Faux-Pas | ||||
| Faux-Pas Composite Score | 40 (0–59) | 47 (0–60) | 42 (25–59) | 0.0397 |
| Detected Faux-Pas | 8 (0–10) | 9 (0–10) | 8 (5–10) | 0.0349 |
| Control questions | 40 (38–40) | 39.5 (37–40) | 40 (37–40) | 0.2115 |
| Intentionalitya | 6 (0–10) | 7 (0–10) | 7 (3–10) | 0.0034 |
| Empathyb | 7 (0–10) | 8 (0–10) | 8 (4–10) | 0.0825 |
| Reading the Mind in the Eyes | 25 (18–31) | 26 (14–32) | 27 (16–35) | 0.2035 |
| Empathy quotient | 47 (20–65) | 42 (28–59) | 47.5 (21–70) | 0.2970 |
| Dorsolateral tasks | ||||
| Trail Making B | 74 (37–210) | 68 (30–203) | 64 (30–119) | 0.1306 |
| Letters and Numbers | 10 (4–19) | 10.5 (4–20) | 13 (6–21) | 0.0046 |
| WCST | ||||
| Categories acquired | 3 (0–5) | 4 (1–5) | 4 (0–6) | 0.1020 |
| Perseverative errors | 7 (2–21) | 6 (3–29) | 5 (0–22) | 0.1116 |
| First category | 12 (10–65) | 11 (10–33) | 12 (10–65) | 0.0074 |
Values expressed as median (range)
WCST Wisconsin card sorting test
aSubjects answered the question: Why do you think someone did the Faux-Pas? The patient gives an incorrect answer when he/she detects intention in the Faux-Pas (which was designed as unintentional); the lower the score, the worse performance
bSubjects answered the question: How do you think the person affected by the Faux-Pas feels?
Depression, anxiety, and personality test results
| Chronic migraine with drug overuse ( | Episodic migraine ( | Control ( |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beck Depression Inventory | 13 (0–44) | 6 (0–27) | 5 (0–22) | 0.0001 |
| Beck Anxiety Inventory | 12 (1–51) | 11 (0–43) | 6 (0–35) | 0.0043 |
| Zuckerman–Kuhlman personality questionnaire | ||||
| Impulsive sensation seeking | 4 (0–15) | 3 (0–11) | 2.5 (0–11) | 0.4670 |
| Neuroticism–anxiety | 8 (1–19) | 9 (0–16) | 5.5 (1–16) | 0.0568 |
| Aggression–hostility | 7 (0–14) | 7 (2–13) | 7 (2–12) | 0.6622 |
| Activity | 6 (1–16) | 7 (1–15) | 6.5 (1–14) | 0.2660 |
| Sociability | 6 (0–9) | 6 (0–14) | 6 (0–12) | 0.1825 |
| Infrequency | 1 (0–8) | 1 (0–7) | 2 (0–6) | 0.3770 |
Values expressed as median (range)
Outcome after 1 year of follow-up
| Positive outcome ( | Negative outcome ( |
| |
|---|---|---|---|
| Orbitofrontal tasks | |||
| Faux-Pas (FP) | |||
| FP Composite Score | 46 (0–60) | 39 (0–52) | 0.0054 |
| Detected FP | 9 (0–10) | 8 (0–10) | 0.0176 |
| Who committed the FP | 8 (0–10) | 7.5 (0–10) | 0.0329 |
| Why is it a FP | 8 (0–10) | 7 (0–10) | 0.0336 |
| Why someone did the FP | 6 (0–10) | 4 (0–8) | 0.0087 |
| Intentionality | 7 (0–10) | 5 (0–9) | 0.0134 |
| Empathy | 8 (0–10) | 7 (0–10) | 0.0150 |
| Reading the Mind in the Eyes | 27 (17–32) | 23 (14–31) | 0.0018 |
| Empathy Quotient | 45 (31–65) | 44.5 (20–60) | 0.0368 |
| Dorsolateral tasks | |||
| Trail Making B | 68 (30–203) | 79.5 (39–210) | 0.0803 |
| Letters and Numbers | 10 (4–20) | 9.5 (4–19) | 0.4009 |
| WCST | |||
| Categories acquired | 4 (0–5) | 3 (0–5) | 0.0584 |
| Perseverative errors | 6 (3–29) | 7 (2–20) | 0.4625 |
| First category | 11 (10–65) | 12 (10–65) | 0.0112 |
| Beck Depression Inventory | 8.5 (0–27) | 15.5 (1–44) | 0.0010 |
| Beck Anxiety Inventory | 10 (0–43) | 17.5 (2–51) | 0.0053 |
| Zuckerman–Kuhlman personality questionnaire | |||
| Impulsive sensation seeking | 3 (0–11) | 4.5 (0–15) | 0.8960 |
| Neuroticism–anxiety | 8 (0–16) | 11.5 (1–19) | 0.0384 |
| Aggression–hostility | 6 (0–13) | 7.5 (3–14) | 0.2075 |
| Activity | 7 (1–16) | 6 (1–14) | 0.8264 |
| Sociability | 6 (0–14) | 4.5 (0–9) | 0.0805 |
| Infrequency | 1 (0–8) | 1 (0–6) | 0.4290 |
Values expressed as median (range)
aPatients with chronic headache that stopped medication overuse and patients with episodic headache who persisted without overuse
bPatients with chronic headache that persisted overusing medication and patients with episodic headache who converted into chronic migraine with medication overuse