Title: BEHAVIORAL MIGRAINE MANAGEMENT
1BEHAVIORAL MIGRAINE MANAGEMENT
- Kenneth A. Holroyd, Ph.D.
- Ohio University
2Behavioral Treatments
- Relaxation Therapy
- Biofeedback Therapy
- Cognitive-Behavior (Stress-Management) Therapies
- Combinations of the above treatments
3 Relaxation Training
- Types of Relaxation Training
- Progressive muscle relaxation
- Autogenic training
- Meditation or passive relaxation
4...Im telling you, Ed. Youve got to learn to
deal with tension better
5Relaxation Training
- Relaxation training involves a specific set of
procedures not just trying to relax - Individuals adapt to chronic muscle tension
- May not recognize tension or relaxation
- May not know how to relax
- Progressive muscle relaxation procedure
- Begins with tensing relaxing 12 muscle groups
(25 min) - Proceeds in steps to quick cue controlled
relaxation that can be used throughout the day - Goals of relaxation training include
- Increase awareness of early signs of headache
onset - Use relaxation to prevent and abort headaches
- Increase personal sense of control (self-efficacy)
6 Biofeedback Training
- Monitor headache-related physiological responses
- Present information (feedback) about
physiological response (e.g., audio tone) - Patient uses feedback to learn to regulate the
response
7Biofeedback Training
8Types of Biofeedback Training
- Electromyographic (EMG) Biofeedback
- Typically for tension-type headache
- Thermal (hand-warming) biofeedback
- Typically for migraine
- Other
- Cephalic vasomotor biofeedback
- GSR feedback, Neurofeedback (EEG)
9Biofeedback Training
- EMG Biofeedback
- May be effective in in individuals who are unable
to master relaxation training - May enable deeper muscle relaxation than
relaxation training - May be accepted by patients who are averse to
psychological treatment - Thermal Biofeedback
- Hand-warming may require weeks of practice to
learn - Hand-warming response is used primarily to
prevent, but also to abort migraines
10Cognitive-Behavioral Stress-Management Therapy
- Teach patients to
- Identify manage stress-generating thoughts
beliefs - Prevent stress-related headaches
- Manage pain, distress disability when
headaches occur. - Manage psychological consequences (e.g.,
depression, helplessness) of headaches -
11 Cognitive-Behavioral Stress-Management Therapy
- Thought Monitoring
- Identify stress-generating thoughts
underlying beliefs - Skills training
- Teach cognitive (e.g., self-talk) and behavioral
(e.g., ) coping skills - Application
- Apply skills in progressively more challenging
situations.
12Cognitive-Behavioral Stress-Management Therapy
- Stress-Generating Thoughts
- Catastrophizing
- I wonder whether something serious may happen
- I keep thinking how much it hurts
- Stress- Generating Beliefs
- Expecting Perfectionism
- Expecting Approval
Holroyd et al., 2005
13Cognitive-Behavioral Stress-Management Therapy
- Stress-Generating Thoughts
- Recognizing challenging thoughts
- Coping Self-Talk
- Stress-Generating Beliefs
- Reversing Positions
- Reframing
- Reality Testing
14Management of Migraine in Primary Care
SettingsEvidence-Based Treatment Guideline
- American Academy of Family Physicians
- American Academy of Neurology
- American Headache Society
- American College of Emergency Physicians
- American College of Physicians
- American Osteopathic Association
- National Headache Foundation
U.S. Headache Treatment Guideline
Consortium Member Organizations
- Diagnostic and Neuroimaging
- Acute Treatment
- Preventive Treatment
- Behavioral and Physical Treatment
Guideline Components
15Literature on Behavioral Treatments
- 355 articles identified
- 70 controlled trials identified
- 39 prospective, randomized, controlled trials
aimed at prevention of migraine attacks met all
data extraction requirements
16Statistical Analysis
- Effect Size (each treatment comparison)
standardized difference between group means - Percentage Improvement
pre-tx - post-tx/pre-tx score X 100 - Summary Statistics
- summary ES using random effects model
- avg. improvement weighted by sample size
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18Meta-Analysis of Behavioral vs. Pharmacologic
Treatment of Migraine ( change)
19Specific Treatment Recommendations
- Findings
- RLX, BF, and CBT are all somewhat effective in
preventing migraine when compared with controls.
- Recommendation
- RLX, BF, and CBT may be considered as treatment
options for prevention of migraine (Grade A
Evidence)
20Specific Treatment Recommendations
- Findings
- Behavioral treatments have been directly
compared and combined with drug treatments for
migraine. Propranolol conferred additional
benefits when added BF, and CBT.
- Recommendation
- Behavioral therapy may be combined with
preventive drug therapy to achieve additional
clinical improvement - (Grade B Evidence)
21Meta-analysis of Pediatric Migraine Treatments
Herman, Kim Blanchard, 1995
22Pediatric Migraine
- Readily learn control of physiological response
- High response rate to behavioral interventions
- Game-like task involves child
- Skills can be used into adulthood
- Limited drug options
23Telephone Administered Behavioral Treatment
- Exhibit Headache Management Skills in Clinic
- 100 1 skill
- 67 2 skills
- 27 3 skills
- Relaxation, partial relaxation, diaphragmatic
breathing, thermal biofeedback
McGrath et al. (1992)
Corrtell et al., in preparation
24Behavioral Migraine Management
- Overview
- Basic Migraine Management Skills
- Relaxation Skills
- Identifying Managing Migraine Triggers
- Recognizing Responding to early Warning Signs
- Effectively Using Evaluating Migraine
Medications - Coping with Migraines
25Behavioral Migraine Management
- Advanced Migraine Management Skills
- A. Hand-warming
- Learning hand-warming
- Applying hand-warming to prevent migraines
- or
- B. Stress Management
- Identifying challenging stress- generating
thoughts - Identifying challenging stress-generating
beliefs - Applying stress-management skills
-
26Headache Locus of Control
- Health Professionals Scale
- Only my doctor can give me ways to prevent
headaches - If I dont have the right medication, my
headaches will be a problem - My headaches can be less severe if medical
professionals take proper care of me
27Headache Locus of Control
- Internal Locus of Control
- I can prevent some of my headaches by avoiding
certain stressful situations - My headaches are sometimes worse because I am
overactive - If I can remember to relax I can avoid some of my
headaches
28 Self-Efficacy Beliefs
- Self-Efficacy Confidence that one can perform
headache management activities - Self-efficacy
- Is assessed for a specific domain
- Is assessed with reference to specific behaviors
- Is highly malleable
29Headache Self-Efficacy Scale
- Headache Prevention
- I can prevent some of my headaches by recognizing
headache triggers - Disability Management
- I can can keep a mild headache from disrupting
my day by changing the way I respond to pain
30TCTH TRIAL INITIAL TREATMENT PHASE
-
-
- AM Clinical Management
-
- Placebo Clinical Management
-
-
- SMT Placebo
- Baseline
Reevaluation -
- SMT
AM - 4 weeks
12 weeks
4 weeks
31SAMPLE CHARACTERISTICS (N 203)
- Diagnosis All patients IHS 2. 2 CTH
25
co-morbid migraine diagnosis
IHS 8.2 excluded - Gender 77 female
- Age M 37.0 years
- Race 95 Caucasian
- Frequency M 26.0 headache days/ month
- Chronicity M 12.5 years problem headaches
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37Conclusions
- Behavioral Migraine Management (BMM)
- Combines behavioral interventions in an
integrated treatment package - BMM can improve migraines and quality of life
- BMM can help empower patients to be actively
involved in the management of their migraines - BMM is a promising intervention for the
management of migraines in adolescents - Telephone administration may make BMM more
accessible to adolescents