Premonitory symptoms in migraine
GlaxoSmithKline (United Kingdom)
Abstract
Migraine is frequently associated with nonheadache symptoms before, during, and after the headache. Premonitory symptoms occurring before the attack have not been rigorously studied. Should these symptoms accurately predict headache, there are considerable implications for the pathophysiology and management of migraine.
Electronic diaries were used in a 3-month multicenter study to record nonheadache symptoms before, during, and after migraine. The authors recruited subjects who reported nonheadache symptoms in at least two of three attacks that they believed predicted headache. Symptoms were entered in the diaries by patient initiation and through prompted entries at random times daily. Entries could not be altered retrospectively. Data recorded included nonheadache symptoms occurring during all three phases of the migraine, prediction of the attack from premonitory symptoms, general state of health, and action taken to prevent the headache.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 12.01
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 25
Authors
9Topics & keywords
- Migraine
- Headaches
- Feeling
- Medicine
- Pediatrics
- Psychiatry
- Physical therapy
- Psychology