| Literature DB >> 31644605 |
Pei-Wen Chi1,2, Kun-Yi Hsieh1,2, Kuan-Yu Chen3, Chin-Wang Hsu1,2, Chyi-Huey Bai4, Chiehfeng Chen4,5,6,7, Yuan-Pin Hsu1,2,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intranasal lidocaine has been shown to be effective in treating patients with acute migraines; however, its efficacy is still controversial. In this study, we intend to assess the efficacy and safety of intranasal lidocaine compared with a placebo or an active comparator for the treatment of migraines.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31644605 PMCID: PMC6808552 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0224285
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flow diagram of the search process and search results.
Characteristics of the included trials.
| Study | Included criteria | Age: | Participants (%females) | Intervention | Follow up | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Regimens and routes | Barre method | |||||
| Maizel 1996 [ | Age > 18 years; migraine with or without aura (IHS criteria); at least moderate intensity | I: 43 (34–50) | I: 53 (87%) | I: 0.5 mL of 4% lidocaine | Yes | 24 hours |
| Maizel 1999 [ | Age, 18–65 years; migraine with or without aura (IHS criteria); migraine frequency 1–6 times per month; | I: 44.5 (9.1) | I: 66 (83%) | I: 0.5 mL of 4% lidocaine | Yes | 1 month |
| Mohammadkarimi 2014 [ | Age ≧14 years; primary headache (IHS criteria; migraine, tension, and cluster); secondary headaches | I: 33.5 (13.3) | Participant in total: 90 (58%) | I: one puff of 10% lidocaine into each nostril | NR | 30 mins |
| Blanda 2001 [ | Age, 18–50 years; migraine with or without aura (IHS criteria) | NR | I: 27 (85%) | I: 2 mL 4% lidocaine + IV 10 mg prochlorperazine | Yes | 24 hours |
| Avcu 2017 [ | Age >18 years; migraine (IHS criteria) | I: 36.0 (12.0) | I: 81 (69%) | I: 10% lidocaine + IV 10 mg metoclopramide | Yes | 24–72 hours |
| Barzegari 2017 [ | Age, 15–55 years; primary headache (met IHS criteria; migraine: 32%, tension headache: 22%, cluster headache: 46%) | I: 33 (8.5) | I: 50 (56%) | I: 1 ml intranasal lidocaine 2% + IV 7.5 mg chlorpromazine | NR | 1 hour |
C, control; ED, emergency department; I, intervention; IHS, international headache society; IV, intravenous; NR, not reported
*, median (IQR).
Fig 2Methodological quality: (A) risk of bias summary of the randomized controlled trials; (B) risk of bias graph of the randomized controlled trials.
Pooled results of pain intensity.
| Time | Subgroups | No of studies | No of patients | SMD [95% CI] | Heterogeneity (I2) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 min | Overall | 5 | 410 | 0.05 [-0.15, 0.25] | 0.61 | 0 |
| Without antiemetic | 2 | 99 | -0.11 [-0.52, 0.30] | 0.60 | 0 | |
| With antiemetic | 3 | 301 | 0.10 [-0.13, 0.32] | 0.39 | 0 | |
| 5 min | Overall | 4 | 248 | -0.45 [-0.71, -0.19] | 2 | |
| Without antiemetic | 2 | 99 | -0.61 [-1.04, -0.19] | 0 | ||
| With antiemetic | 2 | 149 | -0.32 [-0.78, 0.14] | 0.17 | 46 | |
| 15 min | Overall | 5 | 410 | -0.41 [-0.72, -0.09] | 54 | |
| Without antiemetic | 2 | 99 | -0.72 [-1.14, -0.29] | 0 | ||
| With antiemetic | 3 | 311 | -0.28 [-0.67, 0.10] | 0.15 | 62 | |
| 30 min | Overall | 4 | 329 | -0.19 [-0.61, 0.24] | 0.39 | 66 |
| Without antiemetic | 1 | 18 | -0.47 [-1.43,0.49] | 0.34 | NA | |
| With antiemetic | 3 | 311 | -0.14 [-0.64, 0.35] | 0.58 | 77 |
CI, confidence interval; NA, not applicable; SMD, standardized mean difference
*, statistically significant
Fig 3The pain intensity decreased over time: (A) without antiemetics; (B) with antiemetics. Error bars represent the standard deviation of each study, and the average from each study is represented by a single data point.
Fig 4Forest plot of the success rate.
Fig 5Forest plot of the need for rescue medicine.
Fig 6Forest plot of relapse.
Summary of findings for safety outcome.
| Intervention | Reference | Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Lidocaine vs. placebo | Maizels et al. [ | 1. Adverse effects were limited to local symptoms of burning or numbness in the nose or in and around the eye. |
| Mohammadkarimi et al. [ | Not mentioned | |
| Maizels et al. [ | 1. Adverse effects were limited to a local irritation (burning, stinging, numbness) of the nose or eye (n = 101/203); unpleasant taste, gagging, and numbness of the throat (n = 16/203); and nausea (n = 13/203). | |
| Lidocaine + antiemetics vs normal saline + antiemetics | Blanda et al. [ | 1. There was no adverse reaction to the administration of nasal lidocaine. |
| Barzegari et al.[ | Not mentioned | |
| Avcu et al.[ | 1. 40 patients in lidocaine group (49.4%) reported a transient irritation in their noses, whereas 9 in the saline solution group (11.1%) experienced it. |