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Active clinical trials for "Migraine Disorders"

Results 391-400 of 1206

Magnesium Versus Prochlorperazine Versus Metoclopramide for Migraines

MigraineHeadache

This investigation describes a proposed clinical trial that will evaluate the relative efficacy of intravenous magnesium sulfate for the treatment of migraine compared to intravenous metoclopramide (Reglan) and intravenous prochlorperazine (Compazine) in the treatment of acute headache and migraine in adult patients. The ultimate objective will be clinical application of these drugs in the emergency department for the treatment of acute headache and migraine. The two phenothiazines (metoclopramide and prochlorperazine) have been routinely utilized in the treatment of acute headache and migraine in the emergency department setting. Per the 2017 American Headache Society guidelines, both intravenous metoclopramide and intravenous procholorperazine are recommended as "clinicians should offer" agents with level B evidence. Of note, there are no agents with level A evidence purported by this guideline for acute management of migraine. The same guideline offers "no recommendation can be made regarding the role of intravenous magnesium for adults who present to the ED with acute migraine. However intravenous magnesium may be of benefit to patients who present with migraine with aura." Multiple trials have evaluated intravenous magnesium's safety and efficacy in the management of acute migraine. These have demonstrated the tolerability of intravenous magnesium on a with breadth of patients. Most commonly the primary adverse event was flushing which self-resolved. No cases of hypotension were reported. None of these study agents have been withdrawn from the market.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Psychological and Biological Markers of Refractory Migraine

Migraine

The term "refractory" migraine describes a particularly aggressive form of the disease in which the patient does not benefit from any of the preventive therapies with the various classes of drugs available, including treatment with monoclonal antibodies directed against Calcitonin Gene Related Peptide (CGRP). Anxiety, depressive symptoms, somatization, and pain hypersensitivity are significantly more prevalent in refractory migraineurs than in non-refractory subjects who benefit from preventive therapies, suggesting that these symptoms may contribute to treatment refractoriness. Recently, in a preliminary study on the efficacy of a CGRP-targeting monoclonal antibody in Chronic Migraine (CM) patients with at least 3 failures to previous preventive treatments, the investigators showed a higher prevalence of psychological disturbances in those who did respond to the monoclonal antibody compared with the responders. These data, although preliminary, point to a more psychologically complicated picture in non-responder patients compared with responders. To date, however, no neurobiological evaluations are available to explain how psychological comorbidities may contribute to treatment refractoriness. Isolated clinical evidence and growing pre-clinical evidence suggests a role for the endocannabinoid system in migraine. Hence, the present study aims to identify psychological and biological factors associated with refractory migraine. The investigators' hypothesis is that patients presenting with psychological disorders may bear an associated dysfunction of the endocannabinoid system, which makes them more resistant to migraine preventive therapies, including monoclonal antibodies directed against CGRP.

Not yet recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Study of Key Electro-acupuncture Technique on Migraine

Migraine

A random controlled trail to evaluate the efficacy of migraine standard electroacupuncture formula, and to analysis the regulation of the intensity-effects and to observe the peripheral NO, CGRP and NF-кB expression level of migraine patients after electroacupuncture treatment.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Biobehavioral Physical Therapy Strategies Based on Therapeutic Exercise Applied to Chronic Migraine...

Chronic MigraineChronic Headache

The purpose of this study is to know wich combination of treatments are the most effective in patients with chronic migraine. The study design is a simple blind randomized controlled trial (outcomes assessor). The study population: Men and women aged from 18 to 70 years old with chronic migraine for at least 12 weeks. Interventions: A combination of techniques during 6 weeks (6 sessions; 1 per week)

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Oral Dexamethasone for the Treatment of Acute Migraine Recurrence in the Pediatric Emergency Department...

Migraine

Migraine recurrence is common amongst pediatric patients being discharged from the emergency department after treatment for migraine. Despite the commonality of migraine recurrence within the week following discharge, no known effective therapies are available in the pediatric population, though dexamethasone has been established as efficacious in the adult migraine population. The proposed study will randomly assign children and adolescents visiting the emergency department (ED) for migraine to receive either one dose of oral dexamethasone or oral placebo. Twenty patients will be recruited to this randomized, double-blind, pilot trial over a 6 month period, and the aim of the study will be to determine the feasibility and acceptability of the protocol.

Completed14 enrollment criteria

Mindfulness and Migraine Research Study

MigraineChronic Pain

The primary aim of this study is to conduct a randomized controlled feasibility trial of MBSR for patients with moderate-to- severe migraine headache.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Short-term Effectiveness of Transcutaneous Nerve Stimulation in Reducing Migraine Related Pain

HeadacheMigraine

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the short-term effectiveness of combined occipital and supraorbital transcutaneous nerve stimulation in reducing migraine related pain.

Completed15 enrollment criteria

Efficacy and Safety of 2 Dose Regimens of TEV-48125 Versus Placebo for the Preventive Treatment...

Migraine

The study is being conducted to evaluate two doses of TEV-48125 in adult patients with episodic migraine

Completed15 enrollment criteria

Is Chiropractic Spinal Manipulative Therapy an Efficient Treatment Option for Migraine

Migraine With AuraMigraine Without Aura

This study will highlight and validate chiropractic spinal manipulative therapy (CSMT) for migraine. If the method proves to be effective, it will provide a new non-pharmacological treatment option for migraine. This is especially important since some migraineurs do not tolerate acute and/or prophylactic medicine, due to side effects or contraindications due to comorbidity of other diseases while others do not have effect. Thus, alternative treatment options are warranted. The applied methodology of the study will aim towards the highest possible research standards. This international study is a collaboration between Akershus University Hospital, University of Oslo (UiO), Norway and Macquarie University, Australia. The multidisciplinary professional backgrounds are physiotherapy, chiropractic and medicine. By increasing the methodological quality of the investigators research to a very high level, the investigators see the method to work as a guide to increase the quality of chiropractic research in the future, as previous randomized clinical trials (RCTs) of migraine used methodology showing room for improvement.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Nitrous Oxide for Acute Migraine Pain in the Emergency Room (ED)

MigrainePain

BACKGROUND Migraine headaches account for 8-18% of all headaches seen in pediatric emergency rooms. Standard treatment includes IV pain medications, anti-emetics, and IV fluids. Nitrous oxide has analgesic properties similar to those of opioids and is easy to administer. It has been shown in two small studies to be effective in treating migraine headaches. RESEARCH QUESTION Does nitrous oxide act as a safe, less invasive, and effective treatment of acute migraine headaches in children and adolescents presenting to an Emergency Department? DESIGN This is a prospective non-randomized self-controlled study. Repeated measures will be taken to examine change in pain scores before and after nitrous oxide treatment. METHODS Each participant will be given nitrous oxide until he/she reports a pain score of zero or up to fifteen minutes. Study subjects will be asked to rate their pain on a scale of 0-10 before the treatment and after the treatment at multiple time-points.

Completed13 enrollment criteria
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