| Literature DB >> 30764753 |
Joris Lemmens1, Joke De Pauw1, Timia Van Soom1, Sarah Michiels1,2,3, Jan Versijpt4, Eric van Breda1, René Castien5,6, Willem De Hertogh7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In patients with frequent migraine, prophylactic treatments are used. Patients often request non-pharmacological alternatives. One treatment option can be aerobic exercise. The value of aerobic exercise as prophylactic treatment however needs to be determined.Entities:
Keywords: Exercise; Headache; Headache characteristics; Migraine; Physical therapy; Treatment
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30764753 PMCID: PMC6734345 DOI: 10.1186/s10194-019-0961-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
PICOS and eligibility criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | |
|---|---|---|
| Patients (P) | Migraine with or without aura classified by ICHD-II | Non-human subjects (such as models or animals), other types of headache or pregnant women |
| Intervention (I) | Physical endurance, physical fitness, aerobic exercise, exercise therapy performed during at least 6 weeks | Manual therapy or medication as stand-alone treatment or no intervention such as diagnosing or performing tests on patients |
| Control (C) | – | – |
| Outcome (O) | Number of migraine days, attack frequency, pain intensity or duration of migraine attacks | |
| Study design (S) | Randomized clinical trials, randomized controlled trials or clinical trial | Non-English, non-Dutch or non-French; studies published before January 1, 2004; cohort studies, case control studies, case reports, reviews or meta-analyses |
Fig. 1Risk of bias summary: review authors’ judgements about each risk of bias item for each included study (Risk of Bias scale)
Fig. 2Risk of bias graph: review authors’ judgements about each risk of bias item presented as percentages across all included studies (Risk of Bias scale)
Classification of Level of Evidence (Translated from the Dutch classification of CBO)
For articles regarding intervention (prevention or therapy). A1. Meta-analysis containing at least some trials of level A2 and of which the results of individual trials are consistent. A2. Randomized comparative clinical trials of good quality (randomized, double-blind controlled trials) of sufficient size and consistency. B. Randomized controlled trials of moderate (weak) quality or insufficient size or other comparative trials (nonrandomized, cohort studies, patient-control studies) C. Noncomparative trials D. Expert opinions |
Fig. 3Flow chart of study selection
Synthesis of results
| Study ID | Patients | Intervention | Intensity | Control | FU | Results | Confounding |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bond 2018 [ | MWA/O, ICHD-III ≥ 3 attacks/m 4–20 migraine d/m (3m) | 16w BWL program 250min./w 5x/w home-based | Moderate | Migraine education Self-management | 4m | Number of migraine days: / Pain intensity: + 20% Attack duration: + 23% All results: NSa | Overweight or obese (BMI = 25–49.9 kg/m2) Preventive/abortive pharmacological treatment if stable regimen ≥2m |
| Darabaneanu 2011 [ | N = 8 MWA/O, ICHD-II ≥ 2 attacks/m
No aerobic training | 10w jogging 50min. 3x/w supervised 1/3 @ home | 60–75% VO2peak | No intervention | 8w | Number of migraine days: − 39% Pain intensity: − 20% Attack duration: − 20% | Dropout 50% |
| Hanssen 2017 [ | I1 = 15 (HIT) I2 = 15 (MCT) EM without aura, ICHD-IIIb
No regular exercise No prophylaxis 8w | 12w HIT (4 times) 2x/w 4min. 90% 3min. rest 70% 12w MCT, 2x/w 45min. 2x/w supervised | HIT: 90–95% HR MCT: 70% HR | Maintain daily physical activity and physical activity recommendations | / | Number of migraine days: −29% (MCT) − 63% (HIT) Pain intensity: / Attack duration: / All results: NSa | |
| Krøll 2018 [ | EM and CM combined with NP and TTH, ICHD-IIIb ≥ 2 attacks/m | 3m cycling/cross-training/brisk walking/running 3x/w 45min. 1x/w supervised 2/3 @ home/gym | RPE scale 14–16 | N = 36 Maintain daily physical activity | 3m | Number of migraine days: −22% Pain intensity: − 20% Attack duration: − 23% | Participants engaged in some form of exercise activity could continue. Preventive and acute medication allowed. |
| Santiago 2014 [ | CM, ICHD-II
No exercise for 3m No prophylaxis | 12w fast walking + amitriptyline (25mg/d) 3x/w 40min. supervised weekly by telephone | Aerobic (HR + Borg) | 25mg/d amitriptyline | 12w | Number of migraine days: − 78% Pain intensity: − 54% Attack duration: − 27% | Amitriptyline use (TCA) |
| Varkey 2011 [ | MWA/O, ICHD-II 2–8 attacks/m > 1y migraine b before age of 50
< 1x/w exercise 12w | 12w indoor cycling 3x/w 40min. supervised ≥ 2/3 @home | RPE scale 14–16 | Relaxation ( 5-20min./w Topiramate ( 25mg/w - 200mg/d | 10-12m | Number of migraine days: −28% Pain intensity: − 18% Attack duration: / All results: NSa | 50% of all ITT patients have 6m FU |
Legend: a between-group differences, b onset, BWL behavioral weight loss program, C control group, CM chronic migraine, d day(s), FU follow-up, HIT high-intensity interval training, HR heartrate, I intervention, ICHD international classification of headache disorders, ITT intention-to-treat analysis, m month(s), MCT moderate continuous aerobic training, MWA/O migraine with/without aura, N number of, NP neck pain, NS non-significant, PP per-protocol analysis, RPE rate of perceived exertion, TCA tricyclic antidepressant, TTH tension-type headache, w week(s)
Fig. 4Pooled data comparing intervention and control group on the number of migraine days (days/month)