Mindfulness Therapy for Chronic Migraine
Chronic MigraineMedication Overuse HeadacheThe aim is to assess the efficacy of adding on a Mindfulness-based therapy to pharmacological prophylaxis (experimental group: pharmacological prophylaxis + Mindfulness) against pharmacological prophylaxis only (control group) on the reduction of monthly headaches frequency (primary endpoint), symptomatic medications intake, inflammatory pattern, depression, anxiety, cutaneous allodynia, improving disability and quality of life (secondary endpoints). Moreover, other aims are to assess whether adding on Mindfulness-based therapy is also associated to a superior improvement of neuroimaging pattern among patients prescribed neuromodulators or antidepressants and to assess the cost-efficacy of adding on a Mindfulness-based therapy to pharmacological prophylaxis. Mindfulness will be provided in small groups (5-7 patients each) by specifically trained therapists. The treatment consists in six 45 minutes weekly sessions in which one will work on meditation, acceptance and awareness. The program of control group will consist in education of patients, followed by pharmacological prophylaxis. Prophylaxis is prescribed based on patients' profile, such as previous failures, contraindications and so on by a neurologist with expertise in headache treatments. We expect that adding-on Mindfulness will determine a wider reduction of headaches frequency and improvement of secondary endpoints, and that disease cost reduction will support the cost-efficacy of Mindfulness. The study will be a Phase III; randomized, Open-Label; Monocentric study. Patients will be enrolled to detect a 20% difference between the two groups on the primary outcome (50% or more of headache reduction by 12 months). For each medication type and research arm 20 patients will be selected: thus 80 patients will be enrolled for neuroradiological investigation.
A Study of Eptinezumab in Participants With Migraine and Medication Overuse Headache
MigraineMedication Overuse HeadacheMedication overuse headache (MOH) is a type of headache caused by excessive use of acute headache or migraine medications (medications used to treat a headache or migraine once it begins). Treatment of MOH usually involves reducing the dose of or discontinuing acute medications. Eptinezumab is a medication used for the preventive treatment of migraine in adults. The main goals of this trial are to learn whether eptinezumab helps reduce the number of days with migraine, the number of days with headache, and acute medication use in adults who have migraine and MOH.
Is Detoxification Needed in Medication-overuse Headache?
Medication Overuse HeadacheMedication-overuse headache (MOH) is a disabling condition, yet treatable. According to European guidelines and based on evidence, multidisciplinary detoxification is the first choice of treatment for MOH. However, consensus about the details in such detoxification programs is lacking. Contrary, other headache specialists believe more in treating chronic headache with medication overuse with single-therapy of prophylaxis and no withdrawal of acute medication, based on randomized controlled double-blinded placebo trial with prophylaxes. Only a single RCT has compared single-therapy with prophylaxis to detoxification. However there was no significant difference. AIM: To compare three different treatment protocols in order to improve the therapy of MOH. To test several baseline variables for being potential predictors for good treatment outcome. To examine the role of epigenetics in MOH.
Intravenous Treatments Used in Medication Overuse Headache Bridge Treatment
Medication Overuse HeadacheMedication overuse headache is the chronicity of headaches, which occurs more than 15 days a month, as a result of frequent use of painkillers, opioids or migraine attack drugs (ergotamine, triptan) in individuals with pre-existing primary headache disease. In the treatment of this headache, two ways can be followed as slow drug discontinuation or sudden drug discontinuation. The most commonly used method is the sudden discontinuation of the overused analgesic agent, the initiation of prophylactic treatment, and then the application of bridge therapy for 6-10 days. Intravenous hydration, steroids, antiemetics, neuroleptic drugs and local anesthetic drugs such as lidocaine can be used in bridge treatment.
NUMITOR Study: Nummular Headache Iberian Study on the Treatments and Outcomes in Real-World Setting...
Headache DisordersSecondary6 moreThe NUMITOR study is an analytical observational study with an multicenter ambisective (retrospective and prospective) cohort design.
China Headache Registry Study
Headache DisordersPrimary9 moreIn the Chinese Headache and Vertigo Registration Study, patients aged 4-99 years with headache (primary headache and secondary headache such as migraine and tension type headache), vertigo (vertigo diseases such as vestibular migraine) and chronic pain (fibromyalgia and other diseases) were collected. The biomarkers, imaging features, right-to-left shunt of the heart (lung), genetic characteristics, treatment, and outcome (in relation to other diseases) of headache-related diseases were studied, and long-term follow-up was planned.
An Open Internet-based Survey and Natural Language Processing Project Analysing Written Monologues...
Headache DisordersTension-Type Headache4 moreHeadache disorders are among the most prevalent medical conditions worldwide. The diagnosis of headache disorders is based on medical history taking. Digital solutions such as natural language processing (NLP) may be of aid to understand the linguistic aspects of headache attack and headache related disability descriptions by patients. Participants will provide a written description of their headache disorder. The results will hopefully lead to a better understanding of the potential use of NLP in headache disorders.
Longitudinal Study of the Patients With Medication-overuse Headache or Migraine That Completed Baseline...
Migraine DisordersMedication-overuse HeadacheThis is a phone interview research study for patients with migraine or medication-overuse headache (MOH) who have completed baseline MRI scans. Participants will be interviewed by phone at 3, 12, 24 months after the baseline MRI scans. The purpose of this study is to potentially identify the baseline brain functional or structural signatures (functional connectivity, regional homogeneity, amplitude of low frequency fluctuation, and so such) that are predictive of the short- and long- term outcomes as well as treatment response of migraine and MOH patients.
Pilot Study of DFN-11 Injection in Medication Overuse Headache
Medication Overuse HeadacheEfficacy and Safety Pilot Study of DFN-11 Injection in Medication Overuse Headache
Anodal tDCS in Chronic Migraine With Medication Overuse
Chronic MigraineMedication Overuse HeadacheNon-invasive neuromodulation has been applied in several forms of primary headaches, and its usefulness has been suggested for both episodic and chronic migraine (CM). Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) represents a non-invasive electrical stimulation technique that modulates neural brain activity by means of low amplitude direct current trough surface electrodes. Very little evidence is available on the potential effect of tDCS in medication overuse and in the management of medication overuse headache (MOH), a condition frequently associated to CM. CM associated to MOH still represents a challenge for physicians and patients due to the high prevalence in the general population, the associated severe disability, and the high costs imposed by the treatment. The aim of the study was to investigate the possible application of tDCS in the management of CM associated to MOH. The primary objective of this pilot study was therefore to investigate the efficacy of anodal tDCS delivered on the primary motor cortex (M1) as add-on therapy to an in-hospital detoxification protocol in subjects affected by CM and MOH. The secondary objective was to evaluate the possible changes induced by tDCS on conventional EEG in order to obtain further clues about the effects of tDCS on brain activity.