Title: Migraine
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3- Migraine
- Tension headache
- Cluster headache
- Trigeminal Neuralgia
4(No Transcript)
5Migraine Co-morbidities
- Epilepsy
- Stroke -
- Depression
- anxiety disorders
- Irritable bowel syndrome colitis
- mitral valve prolapse
- Allergies (children)
- MRI - an increased prevalence of white matter
lesions
6Migraine classification
- Migraine without aura
- Migraine with aura
- Migraine with typical aura
- Typical aura without headache
- Familial hemiplegic migraine
- Sporadic hemiplegic migraine
- Basilar-type migraine
- Childhood periodic syndromes
- Retinal migraine
- Complications of migraine
- Probable migraine
7Migraine - epidemiology
- 1/2 of all migraine sufferers - never consulted a
physician - prevalence - M6 F15-18
- FgtM 31
- decline after age 50
8Hormones and Migraine
- Up to 70 of women with migraine report attacks
at the time of menses - Menstrual migraine triggered by fall in estrogen
and progesterone - 60 - 70 of migraineurs improve during pregnancy
9Migraine treatment
- Changing lifestyle
- eating on time
- avoiding foods that trigger migraine
- good sleeping habits
- Medications for acute attack
- Prophylaxis treatment
10Triptans
- treatment of choice
- efficacy of the triptans is judged by headache
relief within 2 hours - Vasoconstrictors should not be used in patients
with - Coronary artery disease
- Angina
- Uncontrolled hypertension
- Peripheral vascular insufficiency
- History of stroke
- Which triptan to choose?
- Effectiveness
- Recurrence of headache
11- Antiepileptic drugs
- Antidepressants
- NSAIDs
- ?-blockers
- Calcium channel blockers
12Tension-type Headache
- Dull, steady pain
- Causes a tight feeling in the scalp or neck
- Depression
- Stress
- Sleep deprivation
- Hunger
- Caffeine withdrawal
13Trigeminal neuralgia
- Location of pain V2 and V3
- V1 involved in less than 5 of cases
- Quality of pain needles
- Excruciating pain lasting for a few seconds
- Followed by unpleasant aching pain
14Trigeminal neuralgia
- Pain is not continual
- Triggering factors chewing, smiling, yawning
(motor), hot and cold fluids, brushing teeth, - Diurnal variation - attacks at night rare
15TGN Natural History
- Increasing frequency of attacks
- Recurrent attacks more disabling
- Most patients over 60 years except in multiple
sclerosis
16Trigeminal Neuralgia - Treatment
- Antiepileptics
- Carbamazepine
- Gabapentin
- Phenytoin
- Valproate
- Topamax
- Baclofen
- Surgery for refractory cases
- Surgical neurovascular decompression
17Cluster - headache
- Intensely severe pain
- Unilateral
- Periorbital
- 15 to 180 minutes
- Nausea and vomiting uncommon
- No aura
- Male predominance
- Autonomic hyperactivity
- Lacrimation
- Nasal congestion
- Ptosis
18Cluster - Treatment
- Abortive
- Oxygen
- 5-HT receptor agonists
- Preventative
- Calcium channel blockers
- Lithium
- Steroids
- Valproate
- Antihistamines
19Temporal Arteritis
- Moderate to severe, unilateral pain
- Patients over 65
- ESR elevated
- Biopsy for definitive diagnosis
- Treat with steroids
- Untreated complicated by vision loss
20- A 36-year-old woman with a long history of
catamenial migraines had had a headache almost
every day during the previous year. The
background headache was mild but became severe
and incapacitating at least twice a week,
interfering with work and sleep. She took six to
eight tablets containing a combination of
aspirin, acetaminophen, and caffeine per day,
with minimal relief. She had no fever, weight
loss, diplopia, or tinnitus. Her headaches were
not exacerbated by a Valsalva maneuver or
positional change. Her physical examination was
normal. How should she be evaluated and treated?
NEJM Volume 354158-165 January 12 2006
21Chronic Daily Headache
- Bilateral, frontal or occipital
- Non-throbbing
- Moderately severe
- Due to overuse of analgesics
- Transformation of migraine
22CDH - Treatment
- Patient understanding
- Remove causative medication
- Antidepressants
- Treatment of withdrawal
23 headache-" Red flags"
- sudden onset
- onset after 50
- increased frequency or severity
- headache with concomitant systemic illness
- focal neurologic signs or symptoms
- papilledema
- Recent head trauma
24- hypertension(basal ganglia, subcortical white
matter, cerebellum, thalamus and pons) - hemorrhagic transformation of infarction
- hemorrhage from metastatic disease (thyroid,
renal cell carcinoma, melanoma, and lung cancer) - In younger patients, vascular malformations
- amyloid angiopathy
25I am dizzy
- Vertigo
- Impending faint
- Disequilibrium
- ill - defined
26vertigo
- Peripheral
- Vestibelar neurinitis
- Menieres syndrome
- Central
- Vertebrobasilar ischemia
- Posterior fossa tumors
- Multiple sclerosis
27Impending faint - syncope
- Orthostatic hypotension
- Drugs
- Autonomic insufficiency
- Cardiac
- Vasovagal
- Arrhythmias
- obstructive
28disequelibrium
- Cerebellar disfunction
- Extrapyramidal disease
- Sensory deficits
29Brainstem vascular disease
- The most common symptom of brainstem vascular
disease - Look for other brainstem symptoms
- Drug induced Parkinsonism d/t prochlorperazine
30other
31cerebellum
- Muscle tone
- Coordination of movements
- Eapeciialy skilled coordinated
- Control of posture and gait
32cerebellum
- Flocculonodular lobe
- Vestibulocerebellum / equilibrium
- Anterior lobe
- Posterior lobe
- spinocerebellum / posture and muscle tone
33Clinical manifastations
- Symptoms ipsilateral to the damage
- Incoordination
- Intention tremor
- Equilibrium and gait
- Diminished muscle tone
34incoordination
- Speed of initiating movement is slowed
- Dysmetria
- Dysdiadochokinesis
- The velocity and force are not checked in normal
manner
35tremor
- Intention tremor
- Wing beating tremor
- Titubation head tremor
36Speech disorders
- Slurring dysarthria
- Scanning dysarthria
37Acute cerebellar ataxia
- Intoxication
- Alcohol, lithium, phenytoin
- Associated with nystagmus / dysarthria/
confussion - viral
- Postinfectious
38Acute cerebellar ataxia
- Infarct
- Hemorrhage
- Abscess
- Truma
39subacute
- Brain tumors
- Alcohol nutritional
- Paraneoplastic
- Creutzfeldt jackob disease
40Alcoholic cerebellar degeneration
- Wide base gait
- Legs affected more than arms
- Evolution weeks / months
- Nutritional deficit (thiamine)
41paraneoplastic
- Development days weeks
- Adenocarcinoma of ovary and lung
- Antibodies to Purkinje cells anti Yo
- Small cell lung carcinoma anti Hu
- symptoms precede the detection of the tumours
-
42chronic
- Spinocerebellar atrophy (SCA)
- Friedrich ataxia
- Machado joseph disease
43Spinocerebellar Ataxia (SCA)
- Dominant SCA syndromes have many overlapping
signs Difficult to distinguish on clinical
grounds - Common features to all gait ataxia dysarthria
- Features in some ataxias
- Extrapyramidal symptoms
- Pripheral nerve / motor neuron
- Intellectual deterioration
44Machado-Joseph (SCA 3)
- people of Portuguese ancestry
- autosomal dominant disorder
- Clinical Ataxia, Extrapyramidal signs Bulging
eyes
45Machado-Joseph (SCA 3)
- Chromosome 14q32.1 Dominant
- CAG trinucleotide repeats
- Normal range 12 to 40
- Disease 51 to 86
- More CAG repeats
- Earlier onset
- More rapid progression
- More intergenerational instability of the CAG
repeat length with (anticipation) - Male parent
46Machado-Joseph (SCA 3)
- Frequency Common dominantly inherited ataxia
23 to 36 of SCA - Between families
- Variable disorders
- Most syndromes include cerebellar signs
- Within families
- Tends to be consistent syndrome
- Anticipation Common
- Ophthalmoparesis
- Homozygotes have more severe syndrome than
heterozygotes
47Expansion of trinucleotide repetitions
- Increased number of triplets Þ disease
- More repetitions, more severe disease
- Increase of repetition number from one generation
to the next (anticipation)
48Celiac Disease (Gluten-sensitive enteropathy)
- Clinical features
- Hematologic
- Anemia Iron or Folate deficiency
- Hemorrhage Vitamin K deficiency
- GI
- Clinical Diarrhea (50) Weight loss
- Pathology Enteropathy of the proximal small
bowel
49Celiac Disease (Gluten-sensitive enteropathy)
- Ataxia
- Peripheral neuropathy
- Myopathies
50Celiac Disease (Gluten-sensitive enteropathy)
- Laboratory
- Antibody testing
- Tissue diagnosis Intestinal biopsy is gold
standard - Treatment
- Gluten free diet
- Dietary correction of deficiencies
51Ménières syndrome
- pressure, discomfort, fullness in the ear
- fluctuating hearing loss
- fluctuating tinnitus
- episodic vertigo.
52Tremor
- Tremor is a rhythmic, involuntary back-and-forth
oscillation of part of the body - While at rest
- While maintaining a fixed arm position or posture
(postural tremor) - With movement or action
53Essential tremor
- Hand tremor is the most common form
- It is typically biphasic and involves agonist and
antagonist muscles - in about 10 to 15 of patients, tremor is first
noted in the dominant hand - The frequency of the tremor is between 4 to 12 Hz
54conditions in association with essential tremor
- Parkinson's disease (6.1)
- dystonia (6.9)
- myoclonus (1.8).
55ES treatment
- beta-adrenergic blockers
- benzodizepines
- prysoline
- Topamax
- Thalamotomy
56Motor tics
- sudden, rapid, recurrent, involuntary movements,
particularly of the head and facial area - Simple motor tics eye blinking or facial
twitching neck stretching, head jerking, or
shoulder shrugging - complex motor tics repetitive touching of others,
jumping, smelling of objects, hand gesturing, or
turning in a circle -
57vocal tics
- sudden, involuntary, recurrent, often relatively
loud vocalizations - simple vocal tics
- Complex vocal tics may involve repeating certain
phrases(echolalia coprolalia)
58Movement disorders
59- Hypokinetic movement disorders
- Parkinsons disease
- Parkinsons plus syndrome
- Hyperkinetic movement disorders
- Chorea
- Dystonia
- Myoclonus
- Hemiballismus
- Tics
- tremor
60Involuntary movements
- Chorea
- Dystonia
- Tics
- Tremor
- Myoclonus
- Hemiballismus
61Dystonia
- sustained muscle contractions, usually producing
twisting and repetitive movements - Focal dystonia
- Generalized dystonia
- Task specific dystonia
62Definition of Chorea
- Greek derivation meaning dancing
- Excessive spontaneous, random, abrupt,
brief,movements - Distal predominance
- Flow abruptly from one body part to another
63Motor tics
- sudden, rapid, recurrent, involuntary movements,
particularly of the head and facial area - Simple motor tics eye blinking or facial
twitching neck stretching, head jerking, or
shoulder shrugging - complex motor tics repetitive touching of others,
jumping, smelling of objects, hand gesturing, or
turning in a circle -
64vocal tics
- sudden, involuntary, recurrent, often relatively
loud vocalizations - simple vocal tics
- Complex vocal tics may involve repeating certain
phrases
65Tremor
- Tremor is a rhythmic, involuntary back-and-forth
oscillation of part of the body - While at rest
- While maintaining a fixed arm position or posture
(postural tremor) - With movement or action
66Essential tremor
- Prevalence 0.4 to 5.6. (FM)
- Family history is positively identified in
approximately 60 of patients, inheritance -
autosomal dominant. - Age of onset has two peaks, early in life and in
older age group. - Drinking alcohol often temporarily reduces the
tremor. - Patients with essential tremor may have
- Parkinsonism
- Cerebellar dysfunction
67Essential tremor Cognition
- 232 patients with ET and 696 matched controls age
65 years or older - cases performed less well on
- test of global cognitive performance MMSE
- frontal executive function - Trail Making Test
- Forgetfulness was reported in 117 (50.4)
patients with ET vs 300 (43.1) controls (p _
0.05)
Benito-Leon J et al. Neurology. 200666(1)69-74.
68Essential tremor- Dementia
- 31 (11.4) of 273 ET cases had dementia vs 204
(6.0) of 3,382 controls - ET cases with tremor onset after age 65 were 70
more likely to be demented than controls - ET cases with tremor onset before age 65 and
controls were equally likely to be demented
Benito-Leon J, Louis ED, Bermejo-Pareja F
Neurological Disorders in Central Spain Study
Group. Elderly-onset essential tremor is
associated with dementia. Neurology. 2006 May
2366(10)1500-5.
69Personality and Essential tremor
- 55 patients 61 control
- TPQ questionnaire
- Harm avoidance
- Novelty seeking
- Reward dependence
- Significant difference in (p0.005) harm
avoidance pessimistic, fearful, shy, anxious,
easily fatigued
Chatterjee A, Jurewicz EC, Applegate LM, Louis
ED. Personality in essential tremor further
evidence of non-motor manifestations of the
disease. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry.
200475(7)958-61.
70Pathology in Essential tremor10 cases
- Six cases (60) had Lewy bodies
- tremor duration 25.2 (6-65)
- Four high Lewy bodies density in the Locus
Ceruleus
Louis ED, Vonsattel JP, Honig LS, Ross GW, Lyons
KE, Pahwa R. Neuropathologic findings in
essential tremor. Neurology. 2006 Jun
1366(11)1756-9.
71ES treatment
- beta blockers
- benzodizepines
- prysoline
- Topamax
- Thalamotomy