| Literature DB >> 30497379 |
Zoë Delaruelle1, Tatiana A Ivanova2, Sabrina Khan3, Andrea Negro4, Raffaele Ornello5, Bianca Raffaelli6, Alberto Terrin7, Dimos D Mitsikostas8, Uwe Reuter9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The three primary headaches, tension-type headache, migraine and cluster headache, occur in both genders, but all seem to have a sex-specific prevalence. These gender differences suggest that both male and female sex hormones could have an influence on the course of primary headaches. This review aims to summarise the most relevant and recent literature on this topic.Entities:
Keywords: Cluster headache; Estrogen; Gender; Migraine; Primary headache; Sex hormones; Tension-type headache; Testosterone
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30497379 PMCID: PMC6755575 DOI: 10.1186/s10194-018-0922-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
IHS classification (ICHD-3) for pure menstrual and menstrually-related migraine
| Pure menstrual migraine | Menstrually-related migraine |
|---|---|
| A. Attacks, in a menstruating woman, fulfilling criteria for migraine without aura | A. Attacks, in a menstruating woman, fulfilling criteria for migraine without aura |
| B. Attacks occur exclusively on day 1 ± 2 (i.e, days − 2 to + 3)a of menstruationb in at least two out of three menstrual cycles and at no other times of the cycle | B. Attacks occur on day 1 ± 2 (i.e, days − 2 to + 3)a of menstruationb in at least two out of three menstrual cycles and additionally at other times of the cycle |
aThe first day of menstruation is day 1 and the preceding day is day − 1; there is no day 0
bFor the purposes of this classification, menstruation is considered to be endometrial bleeding resulting from either the normal menstrual cycle or from the withdrawal of exogenous progestogens, as in the case of combined oral contraceptives and cyclical hormone replacement therapy
IHS classification (ICHD-3) for exogenous hormone-induced headache and estrogen-withdrawal headache
| Exogenous hormone-induced headache | Estrogen-withdrawal headache |
|---|---|
| A. Headache or migraine fulfilling criteria C and D | A. Headache or migraine fulfilling criteria C and D |
| B. Regular use of exogenous hormones | B. Daily use of exogenous estrogen for ≥3 weeks, which has been interrupted |
| C. Headache or migraine develops or markedly worsens within 3 months of commencing exogenous hormones | C. Headache or migraine develops within 5 days after last use of estrogen |
| D. Headache or migraine resolves or reverts to its previous pattern within 3 months after total discontinuation of exogenous hormones | D. Headache or migraine resolves within 3 days of its onset |