Most common cause of episodic headache
Aetiology
- More common in females - 1:2.5
- Triggers: sleep, diet, stress, hormonal, physical exertion
Pathophysiology
Migraine without aura (80%)
- Both vascular and neural influences cause migraines in susceptible individuals
- Stress triggers changes in the brain which cause serotonin to be released
- Blood vessels constrict and dilate
- Chemicals including substance P irritate nerves and blood vessels causing pain
Migraine with aura (20%)
- Cortical spreading depolarisation in the migraine centre of the brain (dorsal raphe nucleus, locus coeruleus)
- Activation of the trigeminal vascular system causes dilation of blood vessels
- Release of substance P, neurokinin A, CGRP
→ Increased sensitivity
- In both cases, the chemicals result in the sensitization of trigeminal neurones and brainstem pain pathways
- This makes otherwise innocuous sensory stimuli (such as CSF pulsation and head movement) painful, and light and sound are perceived as uncomfortable
Clinical presentation
- Classically, a unilateral throbbing headache preceded by an aura, such as visual (eg. lines, zigzags) or sensory (paraesthesia spreading from fingers to face) symptoms
- The headache may last 4-72 hours and is associated with photophobia and phonophobia
- There may be identifiable triggers such as oral contraceptives or chocolate.
Migraine without aura - IHS critera
- At least 5 attacks
- 4-72 hours
- 2 of: moderate/severe, unilateral, throbbing pain, worst movement
- 1 of: autonomic features, photophobia/phonophobia
Migraine with aura
- Aura fully reversible visual, sensory, motor or language symptom
- Aura duration 20-60 mins
- Headache follows < 1 hour later but aura can occur simultaneously
- Visual aura most common, positive symptoms usually monochromatic
'Atypical' migrane
- Acephalgic - no headache
- Basilar - very nauseating, vertigo
- Retinal, opthalmic
- Hemiplegic (familial/sporadic)
- Abdominal - more common in young children
Investigations
- Headache diary may help identify triggers
Management
Non-pharmacological
- Set realistic goals
- Education - avoid triggers
- Headache diary
- Relaxation/stress management
Pharmacological
Acute
- NSAID (aspirin, naproxen, ibuprofen) taken as early as possible
- If gastroparesis consider antiemetic
- Triptans (5HT agonist) e.g. rizatriptan, eletriptan, sumatriptan - take at start of headache
Prophylaxis
- Consider if patient is experiencing more than 3 attacks per month or very severe attacks
- Drugs used include amitriptyline, propranalol (CI: asthma), topiramate (CI: woman of childbearing age)
- Also consider non-pharmacological methods: acupuncture, relaxation exercises