migraines
when to seek help
There are times when a headache can be a signal of a more serious issue. Contact a doctor if your headache disrupts your work, school life, or home life, or if you have had several headaches each month and each of them lasts several hours or days. You should also contact a doctor if you experience nausea, vomiting, numbness, tingling, loss of vision or other sensory problems in association with the headaches you have. If you have pain around your ear or eye, have a severe headache with a stiff neck, experience a headache with confusion or a loss of alertness, or one with convulsion - definitely contact a doctor. If you have a headache after experiencing a blow to the head, or you used to be headache-free but now have a lot of headaches, be sure to contact a doctor.
types of migraines
Migraines are classified by the types of symptoms a person experiences in association with them. The two most common types of migraines that people experience are, 'Migraine With Aura,' and, 'Migraine Without Aura.' Other, less common, types of migraines include, 'Abdominal Migraine,' 'Basilar Artery Migraine,' 'Cartidynia,' 'Headache-Free Migraine,' 'Ophthalmoplegic Migraine/Ocular Migraine,' and, 'Status Migrainosus.' There are some women who experience migraine headaches either prior to or during menstruation; these migraines are referred to as, 'Menstrual Migraines.' Menstrual migraines could be related to hormonal changes. Many women who have experienced menstrual migraines to not experience them during pregnancy, or experience migraines less often, whole other women experience migraines for the first time during pregnancy, or after menopause.
-
Migraine with Aura: Characterized by a neurological phenomenon (aura) that is experienced ten to thirty minutes before the headache. Most auras are visual and are described as bright shimmering lights around objects or at the edges of the field of vision or zigzag lines, castles, wavy images, or hallucinations. Others experience temporary vision loss. Non-visual auras include motor weakness, speech or language abnormalities, dizziness, vertigo, and tingling or numbness of the face, tongue, or extremities.
-
Migraine without Aura: The most prevalent type and may occur on one or both sides of the head. Tiredness or mood changes may be experienced the day before the headache. Nausea, vomiting, and sensitivity to light often accompany migraine without aura.
-
Abdominal Migraine: Most common in children with a family history of migraine. Symptoms include abdominal pain without a gastrointestinal cause (may last up to 72 hours), nausea, vomiting, and flushing or paleness . Children who have abdominal migraine often develop typical migraine as they age.
-
Basilar Artery Migraine: Involves a disturbance of the basilar artery in the brainstem. Symptoms include severe headache, vertigo, double vision, slurred speech, and poor muscle coordination. This type occurs primarily in young people.
-
Carotidynia: Also called lower-half headache or facial migraine, produces deep, dull, aching, and sometimes piercing pain in the jaw or neck. There is usually tenderness and swelling over the carotid artery in the neck. Episodes can occur several times weekly and last a few minutes to hours. This type occurs more commonly in older people.
-
Headache-free Migraine: Characterized by the presence of aura without headache. This occurs in patients with a history of migraine with aura.
-
Ophthalmoplegic Migraine: Begins with a headache felt in the eye and is accompanied by vomiting. As the headache progresses, the eyelid droops and nerves responsible for eye movement become paralyzed. Ptosis may persist for days or weeks.
-
Status Migraine: A rare type involving intense pain that usually lasts longer than seventy-two hours. The patient may require hospitalization.
facts and statistics
In the United States direct costs have been estimated at $17 billion, Nearly a tenth of this cost is due to the cost of triptans. including $15 billion in indirect costs, of which missed work is the greatest component. In those who do attend work with a migraine, effectiveness is decreased by around a third. Negative impacts also frequently occur for a person's family.
-
Migraines are more common in women at 19% than men at 11%.
-
Chronic migraines occur in approximately 1.4 to 2.2% of the population.
-
During perimenopause symptoms often get worse before decreasing in severity.
-
Rates of migraines are slightly lower in Asia and Africa than in Western countries.
-
While symptoms resolve in about two thirds of the elderly, in between 3 and 10% they persist.
-
Globally, approximately 15% of the population is affected by migraines at some point in life.
-
In women migraines without aura is more common than migraines with aura, however in men the two types occur with similar frequency.
-
In the United States, about 6% of men and 18% of women get a migraine in a given year, with a lifetime risk of about 18% and 43% respectively.
-
In Europe, migraines affect 12 to 28% of people at some point in their lives with about 6 to 15% of adult men and 14 to 35% of adult women getting at least one yearly.
-
In children, about 1.7% of 7 year olds and 3.9% of those between 7 and 15 years have migraines, with the condition being slightly more common in boys before puberty.
Discussions with your doctor about the triggers of the migraines and additional information concerning them will help your doctor to determine the appropriate treatment for you. Knowing the things to avoid triggering a migraine will help you to prevent known triggers. Awareness of the differences between the types of headaches and additional information can help you to stay as migraine and headache-free as possible.
