Researchers have identified
brain lesions in migraine victims, a finding that could indicate
the severe headaches are a progressive brain-damaging disease
in some cases, a recent study said.
The research, which
has possible implications for treatment, involved 295 Dutch
adults aged 30 to 60, some of whom had migraines with visual
disturbances and some migraines without eye problems. They were
compared to 140 similar people who were migraine-free.
Using magnetic resonance
images, the researchers found that for patients with both migraines
and visual problems the risk of cerebral infarction -- tissue
which has died due to lack of oxygen when a blood clot blocks
an artery -- was 13 times higher than the group which had no
migraines at all.
The problem increased
with the frequency of migraine attacks.
Patients with migraine
but no eye trouble had more than seven times the risk that would
normally be expected. The problem occurred in the cerebellar
region of the brain, which controls motor motions.
Migraines, which
can last from two hours to two days, occur in about 10 percent
of the population and are three times more common in women than
men.
The study done by
Mark Kruit, a physician at Leiden University Medical Center,
Leiden, The Netherlands, and colleagues was published in this
week's Journal of the American Medical Association.
Lenore Lauer of
the U.S. National Institutes of Health, one of the co-authors
of the paper, said: "It means we may need to shift the way people
think about migraines. They're thought of now as episodic --
people get a headache and that's it."
In reality, she
said in an interview, the problem may be a chronic one and "one
of the future questions to ask is about the path and type of
treatment that may be most useful."
She said the study
did not determine whether the lesions are the result or the
cause of the migraines. There have been previously documented
cases of migraine-related stroke in the same region of the brain,
she said, and the report said previous research has suggested
the presence of brain infarcts in migraine sufferers.
Seymour Diamond,
head of the Diamond Headache Clinic in Chicago and executive
chairman of the National Headache Foundation, said the study
shows "the early treatment of migraines should be stressed."
"Something is going
on pathologically in the brain," he said. "It is important to
stress that there are medicines that if taken early enough will
reverse (an attack) and that there are many preventive medicines."
Reference
Source 89
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