| Literature DB >> 35668368 |
J O Lloyd1, B Hill2, M Murphy2, A Al-Kaisy2, A P Andreou1,2, G Lambru3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Initial evidence have shown the short-term efficacy of sTMS in the acute and preventive treatment of migraine. It is unknown whether this treatment approach in the long-term is effective and well tolerated in difficult-to-treat migraine.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic migraine; Migraine; Neuromodulation; Non-invasive neuromodulation; Refractory migraine; Transcranial magnetic stimulation
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35668368 PMCID: PMC9169440 DOI: 10.1186/s10194-022-01428-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 8.588
Fig. 1Spring TMS optimal placement and coil locations
Single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation device treatment protocol
| Preventive treatment titration protocol | |
|---|---|
| Week 1 | Deliver 2 sequential pulses twice daily |
| Week 3 | Deliver 2 sequential pulses three times daily |
| Week 5 | Deliver 3 sequential pulses three times daily |
| Week 7 | Deliver 4 sequential pulses three times daily |
| Week 9 | Deliver 5 sequential pulses three times daily |
| Week 11 | Deliver 6 sequential pulses three times daily |
| Deliver as early as possible 2 sequential pulses every 15 minutes for 1–2 hours or until pain and symptoms resolve. |
Fig. 2Audit flowchart
Demographic and clinical characteristics at baseline of all migraine patients (N = 153) treated with single pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation
| Sex, M/F | 27/126 | 27/101 | 0/25 |
| Age (y), | 44.0 (34–58) | 42 (33–55) | 55 (43–64) |
| Diagnosis, CM/HFEM | 128/25 | 128 | 25 |
| Aura, | 67 (44%) | 56 (44%) | 11 (46%) |
| Medication overuse, | 68 (44%) | 62 (48%) | 6 (24%) |
| BoNT/A non-responders, | 86 (56%) | 80 (63%) | 6 (24%) |
| Number of preventive treatments failed | 5 (2–7) | 4 (2–7) | 3 (1–4.5) |
| CM duration (years), Median (95% CI) | 13.5 (7.0 -, 18.0) | 13.5 (7.0 -, 18.0) | N/A |
| Migraine days, | 13 (8.75–22) | 15 (10–23) | 8 (6–9.25) |
| Headache days, | 18 (12–26) | 20 (15–29) | 9 (8–10) |
| Headache free days, | 5 (0–13) | 3 (0–11) | 16.5 (14.25–19) |
| Abortive treatment intake days, | 9 (3.75–14) | 9.5 (3–14) | 8 (4.75–11.25) |
| HIT-6 score, | 66 (64–69) | 66 (65–69) | 64.5 (60.75–68) |
CM Chronic migraine, HFEM High frequency episodic migraine, BoNTA Onabotulinum toxin A, IQR Interquartile range, CM Chronic migraine, F Female, HFEM High frequency episodic migraine; HIT-6 Headache impact test-6, M Male, N Number, y Years
Clinical characteristics of all patients using single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (N = 153), headache frequency responders and (N = 48), headache disability responders (N = 45), and non-responders (N = 66) at baseline and Month 3
| 18 (12–26) | 13 (8.75–22) | 5 (0–13) | 9 (3.75–14) | 66 (64–69) | ||
HIT-6 Headache impact test-6
Fig. 3Effectiveness outcomes of patients continuing to use single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation at baseline and at 3 and 12 months
Headache impact test-6 (HIT-6) headache disability categories at baseline and HIT-6 changes after daily single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation treatment for all patients at month 3 and for those who continued using the treatment at month 12
| Baseline ( | Month 3 ( | Month 12 ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 142 (93.0%) | 59 (63.4%) | 43 (63.0%) | |
| 4 (2.8%) | 15 (16.1%) | 9 (13.0%) | |
| 5 (3.5%) | 15 (16.1%) | 13 (18.5%) | |
| 1 (0.7%) | 4 (4.3%) | 4 (5.5%) |