Migraines in a Minute (or less)
Download
Report
Transcript Migraines in a Minute (or less)
Medication Overuse Headache
Morris Maizels MD
Blue Ridge Headache Center
Asheville Hendersonville NC
Migraine Remembered
S
U
L
T
A
N
S
evere
niateral
hrobbing
ctivity worsens ha
ausea
ensitive to light/sound
2 of 1st 4
1 of last 2
Headache is episodic, and usually lasts 4-72 hours
Neurovascular theory
of Migraine
Goadsby, 2000.
Sensitization and migraine
1
1. Peripheral
Trigeminal Sensitization
3
1. Throbbing headache
2. Forehead Allodynia
2
3. Thalamic
Sensitization
3. Extracephalic
Allodynia
2. Central Trigeminal
Sensitization
Adapted from Ambassadors program after Burstein et al., Brain 2000
Migraine Triggers
hormones
emotions/stress
disrupted sleep
caffeine withdrawal
foods
change
THE SENSITIVE BRAIN
Pain control mechanisms are partially
defective in migraine patients
Symptomatic Medication
Mild to Moderate Headaches
NSAID’s - high dose (+/- antiemetic)
ASA/acetaminophen/caffeine (Excedrin)*
ASA or acetaminophen/butalbital/caffeine
(Fiorinal/Fioricet)*
Acetaminophen/isometheptene/dichlrophenazone
(Midrin) - ii po at onset, then i qhr up to 5/day
Ergotamine tartrate/caffeine (Cafergot)*
*** Limit use to 2 days/week ***
Triptans and DHE
Sumatriptan (Imitrex)
Rizatriptan (Maxalt)
Zolmitriptan (Zomig)
Naratriptan (Amerge)
Frovatriptan (Frova)
Almotriptan (Axert)
Eletriptan (Relpax)
DHE im/sq, iv, ns
Group by
parenteral
po rapid onset
po slow onset
rapid --> slow
high --> low efficacy
high --> low relapse
more --> less se’s
Triptan side effects/risks
Common: sedation, nausea, muscle ache,
chest tightness (2 – 5%)
Contraindications
• CAD, CVA, PVD
• hemiplegic/basilar migraine
Risk of serious cardiac event with triptans is
~ 1:1,000,000
General approach to acute Rx
Who gets triptans?
Which triptan?
How to use the triptan?
Principles of acute therapy
Stratified care
Early use of medication for patients with
episodic headache
Limit use of all acute meds to 2 days/week
Stratified Care
Usual level of disability
Rapidity of onset
Associated nausea/vomiting
Tendency to relapse
Side effect tolerance
An approach for
triptan non-responders
Review diagnosis
• migraine?
• daily headache (drug rebound)?
Use early in attack, at sufficient dose
Try at least 3 triptans
Polypharmacy (NSAID/antiemetic)
?Mg deficiency
Alternatives for Refractory
Headaches
Chlorpromazine (Thorazine) 12.5 mg iv;
mr q 20 min x 3; total 50 mg
IV Depacon 100mg/kg over 5 min
IV DHE (q8h Raskin protocol)
IV Mg 2 gm/100 ml D5W may be added to
any other regimen
Drug Rebound Headache
h/o episodic migraine
more frequent/daily
refractory to usual Rx
narcotics for rescue
Fiorinal - “preventive”
escalating Rx use
trying to survive
“The desire to take medication is,
perhaps, the greatest feature which
distinguishes man from the other
animals.”
Sir William Osler
What drugs cause drug rebound?
Worst offenders:
Narcotics
Ergotamine
Caffeine-containing
compounds:
• Excedrin
• Fiorinal/Fioricet
• Cafergot
Lesser offenders:
aspirin
acetaminophen
NSAID’s
triptans
Innocent until proven guilty
DHE
“The Unrecognized Epidemic”
• 1-2% of population is affected
• (near) daily tension-type headache, with
migrainous flares
• present upon awakening
• refractory to other abortive or
prophylactic measures
• headache worsens when medication is
stopped
Treatment of Drug Rebound
Patient education
Withdraw medication
Initiate prophylaxis
Provide rescue therapy
Impact of continuing vs discontinuing
symptomatic medication
Prevention of drug rebound
All Rx’s state:
“Limit use to 2 days/week”
eg, Triptan A, B, or C x mg #9
i po at onset migraine–mr x 2 within 24 hr
Limit use to 2 days/week
Conclusion
Episodic disabling = migraine
“Migraine-in-a-Minute” for triage
Stratify care
• treat early
• migraine-specific therapy
Refractory headache is usually due to:
• drug rebound
• co-morbidity
Incorporate behavioral assessment/Rx