Migraine Flashcards

1
Q

Are migraines with or without an aura more common?

A

Without aura

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2
Q

What causes a migraine?

A

Pathophysiology unknown, possibly:

  • episodic cerebral oedema
  • dilation of intracerebral vessels
  • interruption of subcortical sensory pathways
  • hormonal role - drop in oestrogen
  • Triptans inhibit substance P and pro inflammatory neuropeptides
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3
Q

Describe features of the headache

A
On one side
Typically at front or side of head 
Can start on one side and spread all over 
Throbbing or pulsating 
Moderate to severe pain
Movement of head may make it worse
Typically gradually gets worse 
Can last from 4 to 72 hours
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4
Q

Other than the headache itself, what are some other associated symptoms?

A
Nausea and vomiting 
Dislike of bright lights or loud noises
Blurred vision
Poor concentration 
Being off food or hungry
Stuffy nose
Diarrhoea 
Abdominal discomfort 
Polyuria 
Scalp tenderness 
Sweating 
Pale
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5
Q

What is the most common type of aura?

A

Visual aura

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6
Q

What symptoms can occur with a visual aura?

A

Scotoma or hemianopia
Lines, dots or zigzags
Bright shimmering light
Objects or letters on a page may seem to rotate, shake or boil

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7
Q

Other than visual aura, what other types are there?

A

Somatosensory - numbness and pins and needles. Usually starts in hands and travels up arm, then involves face
Speech - dysphasia paraphasia
Motor - ataxia, hemiparesis, opthalmoplegia
Feel fear or confusion

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8
Q

How long do auras last?

A

A few minutes to 1 hour

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9
Q

Does the aura usually go before the headache begins?

A

Yes

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10
Q

Can an aura occur with no following migraine?

A

Yes - silent migraine

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11
Q

What can trigger a migraine?

A

Diet - cheese, chocolate, red wine, citrus fruits, food containing tyramine, dehydration, missing meals
Environment- smoking, glaring light, flickering TV, loud noises, strong smells
Psychological- depression, anxiety, stress, relief of stress, anger
Too much or too little/ broken sleep
Medication - HRT, contraceptive pill

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12
Q

What are the four phases?

A

Prodrome
Aura phase
Headache
Resolution - may feel tired, irritable

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13
Q

What is the prodrome phase?

A

Precedes headache by days or hours - changes in mood, sleep pattern, food cravings

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14
Q

Are migraines more common in men or women?

A

Women 3x as common

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15
Q

What causes a visual aura?

A

Reduced blood flow to occipital cortex before an attack

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16
Q

How do you distinguish migraine from a TIA?

A

TIA has sudden onset, maximum deficit immediately and headache is rare.
In migraine, deficits occur gradually, almost always have headache
In both cases aura may be present

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17
Q

How do you diagnose a migraine?

A

From history
Headache lasting 4/72 hours with aura = classical

If no aura: more than or equal to 5 headaches lasting 4-72 hrs and N&V or phono/photophobia plus any 2 of:
Unilateral
Pulsating quality
Moderate or severe intense pain
Aggravation by or causing avoidance of routine physical activity e.g walking

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18
Q

What are some differentials?

A
Cluster headache
Tension headache 
TIA 
Sinusitis or otitis media 
Intracranial pathology
Cervical spondylosis
HTN
19
Q

How can migraines be managed?

A

Avoid triggers
Non pharmacological: rebreathing into paper bag, warm or cold pack to head
Ensure analgesic rebound headache is not a complicating matter
Triptan combined with either an NSAID or paracetamol
Mono therapy with above can be considered or with aspirin (900mg)
Antiemetics even in absence of N&V e.g domperidone

20
Q

How do triptans work?

A

5-HT agonist

Block transmission in trigeminal nerve to 2nd order neurons

21
Q

When should triptans be avoided?

A

IHD, coronary spasm, uncontrolled HTN, recent lithium or SSRI use, liver/ kidney impairment, Reynaud’s

Rare SEs: arrhythmias, or angina+/-MI even if no pre existing risk

22
Q

What can be used for prophylaxis?

A

Propranolol or topiramate
Amitriptyline can be used but is off licence
Last resort: botulinum toxin type A injections

23
Q

If you have a migraine with aura, how many times as likely are you to have an ischaemic stroke compared to those without a migraine?

A

2x

24
Q

Taking the COCP increases the risk of stroke in women who have a migraine with aura. True or false?

A

True
Women with aura + migraine should not be given COCP
Use progesterone only or non hormonal contraception

Though a low dose COCP can be used in women with migraine without aura

25
Q

Do migraines often run in families?

A

Yes

26
Q

What percentage of people have migraine with aura?

A

30 %

Migraine without aura is more common

27
Q

What is a migraine with brainstem aura?

A

A rare type previously called basilar type
Experience 2 or more before migraine: visual disturbance, speaking difficulties, hearing problems, tingling in hands and feet, dizziness, vertigo

28
Q

What is hemiplegic migraine?

A

Migraine with weakness or paralysis on one side of body is a key symptom occurring before headache

29
Q

What is allodynia?

A

All stimuli produce pain

30
Q

Why should topiramate be used cautiously?

A

Teratogenic

Can interfere with pill efficacy

31
Q

If perimenstrual migraine uncontrolled with standard treatment, what can be given?

A

Consider frovatriptan or zolmitriptan on the days migraine expected

32
Q

Worsening headaches during pregnancy are associated with…

A

Greater risk of pre eclampsia and cardiovascular complications

33
Q

What are the most common side effects of triptans?

A
Dizziness
Nausea
Drowsiness
Warm, hot sensation 
Feeling of heaviness or pressure in areas e.g arm, face, chest
34
Q

Why is it best not to take codeine or medication containing codeine for migraines?

A

Can cause nausea and vomiting - this can also make migraine worse
Medication overuse headaches if used frequently

35
Q

How do you take a triptan?

A

Take first dose when headache just beginning to develop, not before. They do not work as well if taken too early.

If one triptan doesn’t work, the same in a higher dose or a different type may work.

36
Q

Should triptans be taken during pregnancy?

A

No

37
Q

If trying to reduce frequency of migraine attacks, should propranolol or topiramate be used in women of childbearing age?

A

Propranolol

38
Q

When should prophylaxis be given?

A

If experiencing 2 or more attacks per month

39
Q

If the normal prophylactic measures are not working, what does NICE advise?

A

A course of up to 10 sessions of acupuncture over 5 to 8 weeks

40
Q

Is propranolol cardioselective?

A

No has systemic effect - can cause bronchoconstriction (avoid in asthma)

41
Q

Prophylactic treatment can achieve what percentage reduction in attack frequency?

A

50%

42
Q

What is the first choice of triptan?

A

Sumatriptan 50-100mg
Offer other triptan if sumatriptan fails
If vomiting - can consider inta nasal or subcutaneous preparations

43
Q

If the patient has an aura, should triptans be taken at start of aura or start of headache?

A

Start of headache

44
Q

How should follow up appointment be arranged in adults with migraine?

A

Within 2-8 weeks of starting treatment

- discuss frequency of attacks, effectiveness of treatment, adverse effects