Neurology Flashcards

1
Q

When should migraine prophylaxis be considered?

A
  1. Migraine prophylactic therapy should be considered in patients whose migraine attacks have a significant impact on their lives despite appropriate use of acute medications and trigger management/lifestyle modification strategies.
  2. Migraine prophylactic therapy should be considered when the frequency of migraine attacks is such that reliance on acute medications alone puts patients at risk for medication overuse (rebound) headache. Medication overuse is defined as use of opioids, combination analgesics, or triptans on ten days a month or more, or use of simple analgesics (acetaminophen, acetylsalicylic acid [ASA], non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs [NSAIDs]) on 15 days a month or more.
  3. Migraine prophylaxis should be considered for patients with greater than three moderate or severe headache days a month when acute medications are not reliably effective, and for patients with greater than eight headache days a month even when acute medications are optimally effective because of the risk of medication overuse headache.
  4. Migraine prophylaxis may be considered in some patients with relatively infrequent attacks according to patient preference and physician judgement, for example in patients with hemiplegic migraine. Migraine prophylaxis may be particularly useful for patients with medical contraindications to acute migraine therapies.
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2
Q

When should migraine prophylactic therapy be stopped?

A
  1. A prophylactic medication trial should consist of at least two months at the target or optimal dose (or at the maximum tolerated dose if the usual target dose is not tolerated) before a prophylactic drug is considered ineffective.
  2. A prophylactic medication is usually considered effective if migraine attack frequency or the number of days with headache per month is reduced by 50% or more, although lesser reductions in migraine frequency may be worthwhile, particularly if the drug is well tolerated. In addition to reduction in migraine attack frequency or in the number of days with headache per month, reductions in headache intensity and migraine-related disability need to be considered when judging the effectiveness of prophylactic therapy.
  3. Patients on migraine prophylaxis require periodic reevaluation both to monitor potential side effects and to assess efficacy. Because of its utility in assessing the effectiveness of prophylactic therapy, patients should be strongly encouraged to keep a headache diary/calendar. After 6 to 12 months of successful prophylactic therapy, consideration should be given to tapering and discontinuing the prophylactic medication in many patients, although others may benefit from a much longer duration of prophylactic therapy. If headache frequency increases as the prophylactic drug dosage is reduced, the dosage can be increased again or the drug restarted if it has been discontinued.
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