Houston Chronicle

Giving migraine treatments the best chance

- By Jane E. Brody |

If you’ve never had a migraine, I have two things to say to you: 1) You’re damn lucky. 2) You can’t begin to imagine how awful they are.

I had migraines — three times a month, each lasting three days — starting from age 11 and finally ending at menopause.

Although my migraines were not nearly as bad as those that afflict many other people, they took a toll on my work, family life and recreation. Atypically, they were not accompanie­d by nausea or neck pain, nor did I always have to retreat to a dark, soundless room and lie motionless until they abated. But they were not just “bad headaches” — the pain was life-disrupting, forcing me to remain as still as possible.

Despite being the seventh leading cause of time spent disabled worldwide, the migraine “has received relatively little attention as a major public health issue,” Dr. Andrew Charles, a California neurologis­t, wrote recently in The New England Journal of Medicine. It can begin in childhood, becoming more common in adolescenc­e and peaking in prevalence at ages 35 to 39. It afflicts two to three times more women than men, and one woman in 25 has chronic migraines on more than 15 days a month.

But while the focus has long been on head pain, migraines are not just pains in the head. They are a body-wide disorder that recent research has shown results from “an abnormal state of the nervous system involving multiple parts of the brain,” said Charles, of the UCLA Goldberg Migraine Program at the David Geffen School of Medicine in Los Angeles. He told me he hoped the journal article would educate practicing physicians, who learn little about migraines in medical school.

Before it was possible to study brain function through a functional MRI or PET scan, migraines were thought to be caused by swollen, throbbing blood vessels in the scalp, usually — though not always — affecting one side of the head. This classic migraine symptom prompted the use of medication­s that narrow blood vessels, drugs that help only some patients and are not safe for people with underlying heart disease.

Furthermor­e, traditiona­l remedies help only a minority of sufferers. They range from over-thecounter acetaminop­hen and NSAIDs like ibuprofen and naproxen to prescribed triptans like Imitrex, inappropri­ately prescribed opioids, and ergots used as a nasal spray. All have side effects that limit how much can be used and how often.

Neurologis­ts who specialize in migraine research and treatment (“there are not nearly enough of them, given how common the affliction is,” Charles said) now approach migraine as a brain-based disorder, with symptoms and signs that can start a day or more before the onset of head pain and persist for hours or days after the pain subsides. Based on the new understand­ing, there are now potent and less disruptive treatments already available or awaiting approval, though cost will certainly limit their usefulness.

To be most effective, the new therapies may require patients to recognize and respond to the warning signs of a migraine in its prodromal phase — when symptoms like yawning, irritabili­ty, fatigue, food cravings and sensitivit­y to light and sound occur a day or two before the headache.

Even with current remedies, people typically wait until they have a fullblown headache to start treatment, which limits its effectiven­ess, Charles said. His advice to patients: Learn to recognize your early, or prodromal, symptoms signaling the onset of an attack and start treatment right away before the pain sets in.

“It’s possible that a lot of therapies might be effective, including meditative breathing and relaxation techniques, that don’t help once the train is out of the station,” he said.

Women — myself included — often develop migraines just before and during their menstrual period.

By keeping a headache-and-menstrual-cycle calendar, I discovered I also got a migraine when I ovulated. I recalled that my migraines had been at their worst decades earlier when I was on birth control pills, and realized that estrogen withdrawal triggered all my attacks. By then, I was near menopause, but by “filling in” with oral estrogen at the appropriat­e times in my cycle, I was able to prevent the headaches.

Preventive therapy “should be considered if migraine occurs at least once per week or on four or more days per month,” Charles wrote. Possible treatments include blood pressure drugs like beta-blockers; anticonvul­sant agents like topirimate (Topamax); and tricyclic antidepres­sants like imipramine (Tofranil). In addition, botulinum toxin, or Botox, is approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion as a migraine preventive.

Most exciting, however, are new brain-based remedies that have few if any side effects. They include handheld or headband devices, like the Single-pulse TMS (for transcrani­al magnetic stimulatio­n) and the Cefaly t-SNS (for transcutan­eous supraorbit­al neurostimu­lation), that transmit magnetic or electrical energy to nerves through the skull to the brain.

Nearing federal approval is an exciting new class of drugs that directly target the peptides believed to trigger migraine attacks. They include monoclonal antibodies given by injection or through a vein, and CGRP antagonist­s taken by mouth.

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 ?? Paul Rogers / New York Times ??
Paul Rogers / New York Times

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