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===Prodrome Phase===
===Prodrome Phase===


Prodromal symptoms occur in 40 to 60% of migraineurs. This phase may consist of altered mood, irritability, [[clinical depression|depression]] or [[Euphoria (emotion)|euphoria]], [[fatigue (physical)|fatigue]], [[yawning]], excessive sleepiness, craving for certain food (e.g., [[chocolate]]), stiff muscles (especially in the neck), constipation or diarrhea, increased urination, and other vegetative symptoms. These symptoms usually precede the headache phase of the migraine attack by several hours or days, and experience teaches the patient or observant family how to detect that a migraine attack is near.
Prodromal symptoms occur in 40 to 60% of migraineurs. This phase consists of vegetative or affective symptoms as much as 24 to 48 hours prior the beginnings of the migraine attacks. The typical symptoms may consist of altered mood, [[irritability]], [[clinical depression|depression]] or [[Euphoria (emotion)|euphoria]], [[fatigue (physical)|fatigue]], [[yawning]], excessive sleepiness, craving for certain food (e.g., [[chocolate]]), stiff muscles (especially in the neck), [[constipation]] or [[diarrhea]], [[polyuria|increased urination]], and other vegetative symptoms. This experience teaches the patient or observant family how to detect that a migraine attack is near.


===Aura Phase===
===Aura Phase===

Revision as of 16:36, 31 January 2014

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

History and Symptoms

The signs and symptoms of migraine vary among patients. Therefore, what a patient experiences before, during and after an attack cannot be defined exactly. The four phases of a migraine attack listed below are common but not necessarily experienced by all migraine sufferers. Additionally, the phases experienced and the symptoms experienced during them can vary from one migraine attack to another in the same migraineur:

  1. The prodrome, which occurs hours or days before the headache.
  2. The aura, which immediately precedes the headache.# The pain phase, also known as headache phase.
  3. The postdrome.

Prodrome Phase

Prodromal symptoms occur in 40 to 60% of migraineurs. This phase consists of vegetative or affective symptoms as much as 24 to 48 hours prior the beginnings of the migraine attacks. The typical symptoms may consist of altered mood, irritability, depression or euphoria, fatigue, yawning, excessive sleepiness, craving for certain food (e.g., chocolate), stiff muscles (especially in the neck), constipation or diarrhea, increased urination, and other vegetative symptoms. This experience teaches the patient or observant family how to detect that a migraine attack is near.

Aura Phase

For the 20-30%[1][2] of migraineurs who suffer migraine with aura, this aura comprises focal neurological phenomena that precede or accompany the attack. They appear gradually over 5 to 20 minutes and generally last fewer than 60 minutes. The headache phase of the migraine attack usually begins within 60 minutes of the end of the aura phase, but it is sometimes delayed up to several hours, and it can be missing entirely. Symptoms of migraine aura can be visual, sensory, or motor in nature.[3] Visual aura is the most common of the neurological events. There is a disturbance of vision consisting usually of unformed flashes of white and/or black or rarely of multicolored lights (photopsia) or forma­tions of dazzling zigzag lines (scintillating scotoma; often arranged like the battlements of a castle, hence the alternative terms "fortification spectra" or "teichopsia"). Some patients complain of blurred or shimmering or cloudy vision, as though they were look­ing through thick or smoked glass, or, in some cases, tunnel vision and hemianopsia.The somatosensory aura of migraine consists of digitolingual or cheiro-oral paresthesias, a feeling of pins-and-needles experienced in the hand and arm as well as in the ipsilateral nose-mouth area. Paresthesia migrate up the arm and then extend to involve the face, lips and tongue.Other symptoms of the aura phase can include auditory or olfactory hallucinations, temporary dysphasia, vertigo, tingling or numbness of the face and extremities, and hypersensitivity to touch.

Pain Phase

The typical migraine headache is unilateral, throbbing, moderate to severe and can be aggravated by physical activity. Not all of these features are necessary. The pain may be bilateral at the onset or start on one side and become generalized, and usually alternates sides from one attack to the next. The onset is usually gradual. The pain peaks and then subsides, and usually lasts between 4 and 72 hours in adults and 1 and 48 hours in children. The frequency of attacks is extremely variable, from a few in a lifetime to several times a week, and the average migraineur experiences from one to three headaches a month. The head pain varies greatly in intensity. The pain of migraine is invariably accompanied by other features. Nausea occurs in almost 90 percent of patients, while vomiting occurs in about one third of patients. Many patients experience sensory hyperexcitability manifested by photophobia, phonophobia, osmophobia and seek a dark and quiet room. Blurred vision, nasal stuffiness, diarrhea, polyuria, pallor or sweating may be noted during the headache phase. There may be localized edema of the scalp or face, scalp tenderness, prominence of a vein or artery in the temple, or stiffness and tenderness of the neck. Impairment of concentration and mood are common. Lightheadedness, rather than true vertigo and a feeling of faintness may occur. The extremities tend to be cold and moist.

Postdrome Phase

The patient may feel tired, "washed out", irritable, or listless and may have impaired concentration, scalp tenderness or mood changes. Some people feel unusually refreshed or euphoric after an attack, whereas others note depression and malaise. Often, some of the minor headache phase symptoms may continue, such as loss of appetite, photophobia, and lightheadedness.

References

  1. Young, William B. and Silberstein, Stephen D., Migraine and Other Headaches. St. Paul, Minn: AAN Press, 2004.
  2. Evans, Randolph W., MD, and Matthew, Ninan T., MD. Handbook of Headache, Second Edition. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. 2005.
  3. Silberstein, Stephen D.; Lipton, Richard B.; Goadsby, Peter J. Headache in Clinical Practice Second Edition. Andover: Thomson Publishing Services. 2002.

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