Literature DB >> 28132321

O011. Patients with "prolonged aura" do not show clinical or demographic differences from the patients with "typical aura".

Michele Viana1, Mattias Linde2,3, Grazia Sances4, Natascia Ghiotto4, Elena Guaschino4, Marta Allena4, Salvatore Terrazzino5, Giuseppe Nappi4, Peter J Goadsby6, Cristina Tassorelli4,7.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Year:  2015        PMID: 28132321      PMCID: PMC4715150          DOI: 10.1186/1129-2377-16-S1-A67

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Headache Pain        ISSN: 1129-2369            Impact factor:   7.277


× No keyword cloud information.

Background

A recent systematic review of the duration of migraine aura reported that aura symptoms may last longer than one hour in a significant proportion of patients[1]. Here we investigated in a prospective diary-aided study whether patients with a “prolonged aura” (PA - an aura in which there is at least one symptom lasting for more than one hour) are different from the patients with a “typical aura” (TA).

Methods

We recruited 176 consecutive patients affected by migraine with aura at the Headache Centres of Pavia and Trondheim. The study received approval by the local Ethics Committees. All patients signed an informed consent form. Fifty-four patients completed the study recording prospectively the characteristics of three consecutive attacks in an ad hoc aura diary that included the time of onset and the end of each aura symptom and the headache. We also collected demographic and clinical variables of each patient including age, gender, presence of headache associated with aura, frequency of migraine with aura attacks, age at onset of migraine with aura, duration of illness, co-occurrence of migraine without aura or tension-type headache, age of migraine without aura onset, use of a migraine preventive therapy, family history for migraine with aura and white matter lesions at MRI in the analysis. We performed an analysis to evaluate if there was any demographic or clinical variable associated with having suffered from at least one PA out of three attacks.

Results

Fifty-four patients completed the study recording in a diary the characteristics of three consecutive auras (n=162 auras). Fourteen out of 54 patients (26%) had at least one PA, while 30 patients (74%) had three TA. In univariate analyses, none of the clinical or demographic parameters was significantly associated with the fact of having experienced a PA (Table 1).
Table 1

Association between clinical variables and the condition of having suffered of at least one migraine with prolonged aura out of three attacks: univariate analysis.

Clinical variableAll patients (n=54)Patients without prolonged auraPatients with at least one prolonged auraP value
Sex
FemaleMale45 (83.3)9 (16.7)32 (80.0)8 (20.0)13 (92.9)1 (7.1)0.487
Age, years (SD) 39.6 (14.5)41.2 (14.4)34.8 (14.0)0.153
Age at MwA onset, years (SD), n=52 23.4 (11.5)24.2 (12.2)21.3 (9.1)0.571
Frequency of MwA, attacks/year (SD) 23.9 (27.6)24.1 (29.6)23.3 (22.0)0.866
Duration of MwA, years (SD), n=52 15.6 (12.7)17.1 (12.6)11.3 (12.3)0.079
Aura with headache
on 3/3 attackson 0/3 attackson 1/3 or 2/3 attacks46 (85.2)3 (5.6)5 (9.3)32 (80.0)3 (7.5)5 (12.5)14 (100)0 (0)0 (0)0.193
Co-occurrence of MwoA n=53
NoYes15 (28.3)38 (71.7)10 (25.6)29 (74.4)5 (35.7)9 (64.3)0.710
Age at MwoA onset, years (SD), n=38 17.8 (8.6)18.3 (8.7)16.2 (8.6)0.327
Frequency of MwoA attacks/month (SD), n=38 5.2 (5.3)5.4 (5.7)4.6 (1.4)0.904
Co-occurrence of tension type headache
NoYes46 (85.2)8 (14.8)36 (90.0)4 (10.0)10 (71.4)4 (28.6)0.213
Familiarity for aura, n=52
NoYes40 (76.9)12 (23.1)28 (73.7)10 (26.3)12 (85.7)2 (14.3)0.588
Preventive prophylaxis, n=53
NoYes33 (62.3)20 (37.7)26 (66.7)13 (33.3)7 (50.0)7 (50.0)0.434
White Matter Changes at MRI, n=45
NoYes34 (75.6)11 (24.4)23 (71.9)9 (28.1)11 (84.6)2 (15.4)0.604

Prolonged aura: aura with at least one symptom lasting for more than 60 minutes.

MwA: migraine with aura; MwoA: migraine without aura.

Association between clinical variables and the condition of having suffered of at least one migraine with prolonged aura out of three attacks: univariate analysis. Prolonged aura: aura with at least one symptom lasting for more than 60 minutes. MwA: migraine with aura; MwoA: migraine without aura.

Conclusions

For the first time we demonstrate that patients with “prolonged aura” have no demographic and clinical differences with patients with “typical aura”. These data support the need to review the ICHD criteria for migraine with aura. Written informed consent to publication was obtained from the patient(s).

Conflict of interest

None.
  1 in total

Review 1.  The typical duration of migraine aura: a systematic review.

Authors:  Michele Viana; Till Sprenger; Michaela Andelova; Peter J Goadsby
Journal:  Cephalalgia       Date:  2013-03-08       Impact factor: 6.292

  1 in total
  1 in total

Review 1.  Migraine with prolonged aura: phenotype and treatment.

Authors:  Michele Viana; Shazia Afridi
Journal:  Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol       Date:  2017-11-16       Impact factor: 3.000

  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.