(See also Approach to the Patient With Headache.)
Epidemiology of Migraine
Migraine is the most common cause of recurrent moderate to severe headache; 1-year prevalence is 18% for women and 6% for men in the US. Migraine most commonly begins during puberty or young adulthood, waxing and waning in frequency and severity over the ensuing years; it often diminishes after age 50. Studies show familial aggregation of migraine.
Evidence based on evaluation of veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts suggests that migraine may frequently develop after mild traumatic brain injury.
Pathophysiology of Migraine
Migraine is thought to be a neurovascular pain syndrome with altered central neuronal processing (activation of brain stem nuclei, cortical hyperexcitability, and spreading cortical depression) and involvement of the trigeminovascular system (triggering neuropeptide release, which causes painful inflammation in cranial vessels and the dura mater).
Many potential migraine triggers have been identified; they include the following:
Drinking red wine
Skipping meals
Excessive afferent stimuli (eg, flashing lights, strong odors)
Weather changes
Sleep deprivation
Stress
Hormonal factors, particularly menstruation
Certain foods
Food triggers vary from person to person.
Head trauma, neck pain, or temporomandibular joint dysfunction sometimes triggers or exacerbates migraine.
Fluctuating estrogen levels are a potent migraine trigger. Many women have onset of migraine at menarche, severe attacks during menstruation (menstrual migraine), and worsening during menopause. For most women, migraines remit during pregnancy (but sometimes they worsen during the 1st or 2nd trimester); they worsen after childbirth, when estrogen levels decrease rapidly.
Oral contraceptives and other hormone therapy occasionally trigger or worsen migraine and have been associated with stroke in women who have migraine with aura.
Familial hemiplegic migraine, a rare subtype of migraine, is associated with genetic defects on chromosomes 1, 2, and 19. The role of genes in the more common forms of migraine is under study. In some families, the migraine phenotype varies considerably, causing primarily headache in some family members, vertigo in others, and hemiplegia or an aura in others. This finding suggests that migraine may actually be a more generalized disorder and not just a headache disorder.
Symptoms and Signs of Migraine
Often, a prodrome (a sensation that a migraine is beginning) heralds attacks. The prodrome may include mood changes, neck pain, food cravings, loss of appetite, nausea, or a combination.
An aura precedes attacks in about 25% of patients. Auras are temporary neurologic disturbances that can affect sensation, balance, muscle coordination, speech, or vision; they last minutes to an hour. The aura may persist after headache onset. Most commonly, auras involve visual symptoms (fortification spectra—eg, binocular flashes, arcs of scintillating lights, bright zigzags, scotomata). Paresthesias and numbness (typically starting in one hand and marching to the ipsilateral arm and face), speech disturbances, and transient brain stem dysfunction (causing, for example, ataxia, confusion, or even obtundation) are less common than visual auras. Some patients have an aura with little or no headache.
Headache varies from moderate to severe, and attacks last from 4 hours to several days, typically resolving with sleep. The pain is often unilateral but may be bilateral, most often in a frontotemporal distribution, and is typically described as pulsating or throbbing.
Migraine is more than a headache. Associated symptoms such as nausea (and occasionally vomiting), photophobia, sonophobia, and osmophobia are prominent. Patients report difficulty concentrating during attacks. Routine physical activity usually aggravates migraine headache; this effect, plus the photophobia and sonophobia, encourages most patients to lie in a dark, quiet room during attacks. Severe attacks can be incapacitating, disrupting family and work life.
Attacks vary significantly in frequency and severity. Many patients have several types of headache, including milder attacks without nausea or photophobia; they may resemble tension-type headache but are a forme fruste of migraine.
Chronic migraine
Patients with episodic migraine can develop chronic migraine. These patients have headaches ≥ 15 days/month. This headache disorder used to be called combination or mixed headache because it had features of migraine and tension-type headache. These headaches often develop in patients who overuse medications for acute treatment of headaches.
Other symptoms
Other, rare forms of migraine can cause other symptoms:
Migraine with brain stem aura (previously called basilar artery migraine) causes combinations of vertigo, ataxia, visual field loss, sensory disturbances, focal weakness, and altered level of consciousness.
Hemiplegic migraine, which may be sporadic or familial, causes unilateral weakness.
Diagnosis of Migraine
Clinical evaluation
Diagnosis of migraine is based on characteristic symptoms and a normal physical examination, which includes a thorough neurologic examination.
Red flag findings that suggest an alternate diagnosis (even in patients known to have migraine) include the following:
Pain that reaches peak intensity within a few seconds or less (thunderclap headache)
Onset after age 50
Headaches that increase in intensity or frequency for weeks or longer
History of cancer (brain metastases) or an immunosuppressive disorder (eg, HIV infection, AIDS)
Fever, meningismus, altered mental status, or a combination
Persistent focal neurologic deficits
A clear change in an established headache pattern
Patients with characteristic symptoms and no red flag findings do not require testing. Patients with red flag findings often require testing, including MRI and sometimes lumbar puncture.
Common diagnostic errors include the following:
Not realizing that migraine often causes bilateral pain and is not always described as throbbing
Misdiagnosing migraine as sinus headache or eye strain because autonomic and visual symptoms of migraine are absent
Assuming that any headache in patients known to have migraine represents another migraine attack (a thunderclap headache or a change in the previous headache pattern may indicate a new, potentially serious disorder)
Mistaking migraine with aura for a transient ischemic attack, especially when the aura occurs without headache, in older people
Diagnosing a thunderclap headache as migraine because a triptan relieves it (a triptan can also relieve a headache due to subarachnoid hemorrhage)
Several unusual disorders can mimic migraine with aura:
Dissection of the carotid or vertebral artery
Cerebral vasculitis
Moyamoya disease
CADASIL (cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy)
MELAS (mitochondrial encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and strokelike episodes) syndrome
Treatment of Migraine
Elimination of obvious triggers
Relaxation techniques, yoga, or behavioral interventions
dopamine antagonist antiemetic
Neuromodulatory devices for acute treatment and prevention
A thorough explanation of the disorder helps patients understand that although migraine cannot be cured, it can be controlled, enabling them to better participate in treatment.
Patients are urged to keep a written headache diary to document the number and timing of attacks, possible triggers, and response to treatment. Identified triggers are eliminated when possible. However, elimination of triggers can be overdone.
1). If patients wish to avoid medications or if medications have been ineffective, neuromodulatory treatments can sometimes be used for acute attacks and/or prevention.
Clinicians sometimes recommend behavioral interventions (biofeedback, stress management, psychotherapy) to manage migraine, especially when stress is a major trigger or when analgesics are being overused.
Yoga can reduce headache frequency and intensity; it enhances vagal tone and decreases sympathetic drive, thus improving cardiac autonomic balance. Relaxation techniques can reduce sympathetic nervous system activity, ease muscle tension, and alter brain wave activity.
Acute attacks
Triptans are selective serotonin 1B,1D receptor agonists. They are not analgesic per se but specifically block the release of neuropeptides that trigger migraine pain. Triptans are most effective when taken at the onset of attacks. They are available in oral, intranasal, and subcutaneous forms; subcutaneous forms are more effective but have more adverse effects. Overuse of triptans can also lead to medication overuse headache
Evidence supports use of neuromodulatory devices for acute attacks and prevention of migraine headaches.
Intractable attacks
IV fluids (eg, 1 to 2 L of 0.9% normal saline solution) can help relieve headache and increase a sense of well-being, especially in patients who are dehydrated from vomiting.
Opioids should be used as a last resort (rescue drug) for severe headache when other measures are ineffective.
Chronic migraines
Evidence supports use of neurostimulation for acute treatment and prevention of chronic migraine headaches. Noninvasive options include supraorbital stimulation, vagus nerve stimulation, single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation, and remote electrical stimulation.
Neuromodulatory treatments
Neuromodulatory treatments, which affect brain activity through electrical currents or magnetic fields, can be noninvasive, using commercially available devices. They can also be used to treat attacks and to prevent them.
Noninvasive transcranial magnetic stimulation, using a handheld device applied to the back of the head may relieve acute migraine (3). A device that uses an armband to deliver a nonpainful electrical skin stimulus (called remote electrical neuromodulation) can relieve acute migraine pain. A handheld device that delivers noninvasive vagus nerve stimulation is also effective.
Trigeminal nerve stimulation, with a device applied to the forehead, can be used in patients who are ≥ 18 to treat acute migraine attacks (with or without an aura) or to reduce the frequency of attacks.
Noninvasive neuromodulatory devices have no significant adverse effects. Invasive treatments tend to be available only at specialized centers and have greater risks than noninvasive treatments.
Treatment references
1. Marmura MJ, Silberstein SD, Schwedt TJ: The acute treatment of migraine in adults: The American Headache Society evidence assessment of migraine pharmacotherapies. Headache 55 (1):3–20, 2015.
2. Miller S, Sinclair AJ, Davies B, Matharu M: Neurostimulation in the treatment of primary headaches. Pract Neurol 16 (5):362–375, 2016. doi: 10.1136/practneurol-2015-001298
3. Lipton RB, Dodick DW, Silberstein SD, et al: Single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation for acute treatment of migraine with aura: A randomised, double-blind, parallel-group, sham-controlled trial. Lancet Neurol 9:373–380, 2010. doi: 10.1016/S1474-4422(10)70054-5
Prognosis for Migraine
For some patients, migraine is an infrequent, tolerable inconvenience. For others, it is a devastating disorder resulting in frequent periods of incapacity, loss of productivity, and severely impaired quality of life.
Prevention of Migraine
For patients who use analgesics frequently (eg, > 2 days/week), particularly those with medication overuse headache, preventive drugs should be combined with a program for stopping overused analgesics. Choice of medication can be guided by coexisting disorders, as for the following:
A beta-blocker for patients with anxiety or coronary artery disease
1).
Neuromodulatory treatments can also help. Transcutaneous supraorbital nerve stimulation, using a device applied to the forehead, can reduce the frequency of migraines (2). Transcranial magnetic stimulation, using by a device applied to the back of the skull, is indicated for the acute and prophylactic treatment of migraine headache in adolescents (≥ 12) and adults.
Prevention references
1. Jain S, Silberstein SD: Invited commentary on preventive anti-migraine therapy (PAMT). Curr Treat Options Neurol 21 (4):14, 2019. doi:10.1007/s11940-019-0555-4.
2. Schoenen J, Vandersmissen B, Jeangette S, et al: Migraine prevention with a supraorbital transcutaneous stimulator: A randomized controlled trial. Neurol 80 (8):697–704, 2013. doi: https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0b013e3182825055
Key Points
Migraine is a common primary headache disorder.
Symptoms can include throbbing unilateral or bilateral pain, nausea, sensitivity to sensory stimuli (eg, light, sounds, smells), nonspecific prodromal symptoms, and temporary neurologic symptoms that precede headache (auras).
Diagnose migraine based on clinical findings; if patients have red flag findings, imaging and other tests are often needed.
Involve patients in their care, including avoiding triggers and using biofeedback, stress management, and psychotherapy as appropriate.