Introduction

  • Description: Migraine headaches are recurrent severe headaches that last for 4–72 hours and are accompanied by neurologic, gastrointestinal, and autonomic changes. These may or may not be preceded by a characteristic aura.

  • Prevalence: Migraine headaches affect 15%–20% of women in the reproductive age. Approximately 10% of tension headache sufferers also have migraine headaches.

  • Predominant Age: Migraine headaches—ages 25–55 years (peak, 30–49 years), first attack generally between adolescence and 20 years.

  • Genetics: Migraines are three times more common in women than in men. Of migraine sufferers, 89% have a family history of headache. Several genes have been implicated, including the KCNK18 gene (encodes for TRESK, a two-pore domain potassium channel) and the CSNK1D (encodes casein kinase I isoform delta), but confirmed associations are lacking.

Etiology and Pathogenesis

  • Causes: Neuronal dysfunction leads to a sequence of changes intracranially and extracranially that results in migraine (including the four phases; prodromal symptoms, aura, headache, and postdrome). Migraine aura and headache are related to a cortical spreading depression (self-propagating wave of neuronal and glial depolarization that spreads over the cerebral cortex). This depolarization results in the aura of migraine, activation of trigeminal nerve afferents, and altered blood-brain barrier permeability. Activation of trigeminal afferents causes sterile inflammatory changes in the pain-sensitive meninges, resulting in headache. Stimulation of the trigeminal ganglion also causes release of vasoactive neuropeptides (substance P, calcitonin gene-related peptide [CGRP], neurokinin A) resulting in vasodilation and protein extravasation. Neuronal sensitization occurs, amplifying nociception. The CGRP (a 37–amino acid neuropeptide) plays a key role in mediating trigeminovascular pain transmission and vasodilation. A strong relationship with female sex hormones is suspected.

  • Risk Factors: More common in upper-income patients (1.6 times); 60%–70% of women note a link with menstruation (14% of women have migraine headaches only during menses). Precipitating factors: emotional stress (80%), some foods, stress relief (let down), missed meals, sleep disturbances.

Signs and Symptoms

  • May be preceded by prodrome (75%) or aura lasting <1 hour (25%)

  • May begin with dull ache

  • Unilateral pain (30%–40%, may switch sides from attack to attack)

  • Pulsating quality (60%), rapid onset

  • Moderate to severe intensity

  • Made worse by activity

  • Frequently accompanied by nausea (90%), vomiting (60%), photophobia (80%), phonophobia, blurred vision, scalp tenderness and neck stiffness, restlessness, irritability, nasal congestion, facial edema

  • Menstrual migraine is characterized by onset between 1 day before and 4 days after menstruation (first day is most common). This pattern is observed in 15% of patients.

Diagnostic Approach

Differential Diagnosis

  • Depression

  • Cervical spondylosis

  • Temporomandibular joint syndrome

  • Analgesic dependency

  • Anemia

  • Medication or toxin exposure

  • Dental disease

  • Chronic sinusitis

  • Temporal arteritis

  • Trigeminal neuralgia

  • Transient ischemic attack

  • Pheochromocytoma

  • Associated Conditions: Associated with increased risk of peptic ulcer and coronary heart disease. Epilepsy, depression, anxiety, Raynaud phenomenon, mitral valve prolapse, stroke, motion sickness, and panic disorders are more common in patients with migraine headaches.

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