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Migraine Pain Might
Signal Deeper Problems
The lessons on migraine headaches leave
some people wanting to learn more.
Medicines for treating migraine
pain or preventing migraine attacks are improving all the time.
But a series of small studies has opened new debate on whether
migraine may be more than just a painful experience, at least
for some patients.
Migraine, some researchers say,
is triggering ischemic mini-strokes (small blood blockages in
the brain) for certain sufferers. This, doctors suggest, means
migraine may add up to a chronic progressive disease, each attack
pointing toward an eventual critical mass.
Migraine is considered a vascular
headache because it is associated with changes in the size of
the arteries in and outside of the brain.
The purported link between migraine
and apparent mini-strokes is particularly pronounced for victims
whose attacks coincide with an aura spots or lines before their
eyes though patients without aura are not always immune. Interestingly,
this same aura phenomenon was observed in another study linking
migraine attacks with chest pain mimicking that of a heart attack.
The chest pain, however, was not
a sign of heart disease. Nor did the mini-strokes cause the classic
symptoms of a stroke. They were what doctors call sub clinical
real, as confirmed by sensitive MRI scans but without overt effects.
What worries the neurologists is that the minor brain damage caused
by enough of these sub clinical migraine-triggered events might
accumulate over time to result in serious trouble.
Migraine should be conceptualized
not just as an episodic disorder but as a chronic-episodic and
sometimes chronic progressive disorder, wrote Drs. Richard B.
Lipton and Jullie Pan of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine
in New York City in an editorial in the Journal of the American
Medical Association.
Under this paradigm, they added,
the goals of treatment may shift. Instead of merely relieving
pain and restoring patients' ability to function, there could
also be a need to prevent migraine disease progression. Researchers
don't believe that all migraineurs are at risk of these mini-strokes,
and they are trying to pinpoint the subgroup that is most sensitive
for special attention.
The Einstein team was commenting
on a Dutch study in the medical journal that looked at 60 brain
infarcts detected in 31 migraneurs. The study concluded that patients
with migraine in the general population are at increased risk
of these sub clinical mini-strokes, particularly lesions located
in the posterior cerebellum.
Patients with migraine with aura
and a high attack frequency were at greatest risk. In addition,
women, but not men, with migraine with and without aura were at
increased risk of deep white matter lesions, and this risk also
increased with the frequency of each attack.
White matter damage is probably
the result of even brief blood blockages, temporary low blood
sugar, hypoglycemia, energy deprivation, oxidative stress, or
platelet clumping.
Whether this all boils down to
a significant finding is not yet clear. Why only women and not
men should be at increased risk for white matter lesions is not
known, but this finding is consistent with women being at increased
risk for stroke, the Dutch authors wrote.
Meanwhile, a subsequent analysis
of 14 studies in the medical literature found that the risk of
ischemic stroke was more than twice as great for migraineurs as
it was for people who don't have migraine. And if it turns out
that reducing the frequency of migraine attacks is a viable approach
to preventing the accumulation of brain damage, there is always
surgery.
In the January 2005 issue of Plastic
and Reconstructive Surgery, a study found that patients can
be injected with Botox to determine which muscles in their forehead
or back of their head triggered their migraines. Once the muscles
are pinpointed, they can be surgically removed.
The surgery eliminated migraines
in 35 percent of the patients and reduced the frequency, intensity
or duration of migraines in 92 percent.
More information
The National Headache Foundation
has more about migraine.
Reference
Source 101
February 28, 2005
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