Is It a Migraine? Risk Factors and Diagnostic Categories
CLINICAL ACTIONS:
Migraine is a complex neurologic disorder including both moderate to severe headache along with a variety of neurologic and systemic symptoms. Common symptoms include hypersensitivity to light and sound, cutaneous pain sensitization, and GI symptoms.
- Migraine symptoms are often described as follows
- Unilateral (60%)
- Throbbing (50%)
- Aggravated by physical activity or head movement (90%)
- Neck pain
- Aura may include
- Flashes of light | Partial loss of vision | Parasthesias | Vertigo | Ataxia | Diplopia
- Symptoms are typically bilateral, sequential (visual, then sensory) and recurrent in nature
Migraine Categories
Migraine with aura (with at least two attacks fulfilling the two following criteria)
- One or more of the following fully reversible aura symptoms
- Visual
- Sensory
- Speech and/or language
- Motor
- Brainstem
- Retinal
- At least three of the following six characteristics
- At least one aura symptom spreads gradually over ≥5 minutes
- ≥2 aura symptom in succession
- Each individual aura symptom lasts 5–60 minutes
- ≥1 aura symptom is unilateral
- ≥1 aura symptom is positive for scintillations and pins and needles
- Aura is accompanied, or followed within 60 minutes, by headache
Note: Not better accounted for by another diagnosis
Migraine without aura (at least 5 attacks fulfilling the following criteria)
- Headache lasting 4-72 hours (untreated or successfully treated)
- Headache has at least two of the following characteristics
- Unilateral | Pulsating | Moderate/severe intensity | Aggravated by or causing avoidance of routine physical activity (e.g. walking or climbing stairs)
- At least one of the following during the headache
- Nausea and/or vomiting | Photophobia | Phonophobia
- Other disorders ruled out (e.g. meningitis)
Chronic Migraine Definition
- Headache on more than 15 days/month for >3 months
- ≥ 8 days meet diagnostic criteria for migraine with or without aura
- Not better accounted for by another diagnosis
SYNOPSIS:
The WHO lists migraine as the sixth highest cause worldwide of years lost due to disability. Migraine may not always present with typical symptoms and can be bilateral, mild, non-throbbing, with facial pain and hence confused with tension or sinus headache. It may be preceded by prodromal symptoms hours or days before headache. Symptoms can include fatigue, neck stiffness and impaired concentration. Postdromal symptoms occur up to 24 hours after headache may include weakness, fatigue, somnolence, photophobia, impaired concentration, irritability and nausea.
KEY POINTS:
- Prevalence peaks between ages 30 to 39 and is uncommon after the age of 60 and prior to adolescence
- In women, the annual and lifetime prevalence are 18% and 33%
- A minority (
- Usually without aura
- Tend to be longer and accompanied by more severe nausea
- Overuse of acute medications
- Inadequate treatment of acute attack
- Caffeine consumption
- Snoring
- Obesity
- Female sex
- Allodynia (perception of pain when non-painful stimuli are applied to the skin)
- Head injury
- Low socioeconomic status
- Depression, anxiety, pain disorders
LEARN MORE – PRIMARY SOURCES:
AAFP: Approach to Acute Headache in Adults
BMJ: Management of chronic migraine
SPECIALTY AREAS
- Alerts
- Allergy And Immunology
- Cancer Screening
- Cardiology
- Cervical Cancer Screening
- Dermatology
- Diabetes
- Endocrine
- ENT
- Evidence Matters
- General Internal Medicine
- Genetics
- Geriatrics
- GI
- GU
- Hematology
- ID
- Medical Legal
- Mental Health
- MSK
- Nephrology
- Neurology
- PcMED Connect
- PrEP for Patients
- PrEP for Physicians
- Preventive Medicine
- Pulmonary
- Rheumatology
- Vaccinations
- Women's Health
- Your Practice