Kelman Leslie
Headache Center of Atlanta, GA 30342, USA.
Headache. 2004 Oct;44(9):865-72. doi: 10.1111/j.1526-4610.2004.04168.x.
This study of premonitory symptoms in migraine was performed to document the frequency, duration, and types of symptoms in a large group of migraine patients.
Prodrome importance continues to be debated. Intervention early in the migraine attack is assuming more importance and necessitates better knowledge of the prodrome.
A total of 893 migraine patients (IHS 1.1-1.7) were evaluated at first visit. Prodrome frequency, duration, and characteristics were analyzed in the total migraine population IHS 1.1-1.7 and IHS 1.1-1.6 migraine.
A total of 32.9% of IHS migraine 1.1-1.6 patients reported prodrome symptoms with an average of 9.42 hours. IHS 1.1-1.7 migraine reported 29.7% and 6.8 hours, respectively. The most commonest symptoms were tiredness, mood change, and gastrointestinal symptoms; all three of these symptoms were present together in 17% of the patients with prodrome. The duration of prodrome was less than 1 hour in 45.1%, 1-2 hours in 13.6%, 2-4 hours in 15.0%, 4-12 hours in 13.1%, and greater than 12 hours in 13.2%. IHS 1.1-1.7 patients showed similar findings. IHS 1.1-1.6 patients with prodrome differed from patients without prodrome in having more triggers as a whole (P <.01), more individual triggers including alcohol (P <.01), hormones (P <.01), light (P <.001), not eating (P <.05), perfume (P <.01), stress (P <.01), and weather changes (P <.05), a longer duration of aura (P <.05), longer time between aura and headache (P <.05), more aura with no headache (P <.05), longer time to peak of headache (P <.05), longer time to respond to triptan (P <.05), longer maximum duration of headache (P <.05), and more headache associated nausea (P <.05), more headache associated running of the nose or tearing of the eyes (P <.05), more postdrome syndrome (P <.05), and longer duration of postdrome syndrome (P <.001).
This study provides a portrait of prodrome in a large cohort of patients. It highlights differences between patients with prodrome and patients not having prodrome, and it draws attention to the potential of preventing the headache phase of the acute migraine attack.
本研究针对偏头痛的前驱症状展开,旨在记录一大群偏头痛患者中症状的频率、持续时间及类型。
前驱症状的重要性仍存在争议。偏头痛发作早期的干预愈发重要,这就需要更好地了解前驱症状。
首次就诊时对总共893例偏头痛患者(国际头痛协会1.1 - 1.7型)进行评估。分析了国际头痛协会1.1 - 1.7型偏头痛患者总体以及国际头痛协会1.1 - 1.6型偏头痛患者前驱症状的频率、持续时间和特征。
国际头痛协会1.1 - 1.6型偏头痛患者中,共有32.9%报告有前驱症状,平均持续9.42小时。国际头痛协会1.1 - 1.7型偏头痛患者报告的比例分别为29.7%和6.8小时。最常见的症状是疲倦、情绪变化和胃肠道症状;在前驱症状患者中,17%的患者这三种症状同时出现。前驱症状持续时间小于1小时的占45.1%,1 - 2小时的占13.6%,2 - 4小时的占15.0%,4 - 12小时的占13.1%,大于12小时的占13.2%。国际头痛协会1.1 - 1.7型患者有类似发现。有前驱症状的国际头痛协会1.1 - 1.6型患者与无前驱症状的患者相比,总体上有更多的诱发因素(P <.01),包括酒精(P <.01)、激素(P <.01)、光线(P <.001)、未进食(P <.05)、香水(P <.01)、压力(P <.01)和天气变化(P <.05)等更多个体诱发因素,有更长的先兆持续时间(P <.05),先兆与头痛之间的时间间隔更长(P <.05),更多无头痛的先兆(P <.05),头痛达到峰值的时间更长(P <.05),对曲坦类药物反应的时间更长(P <.05),头痛的最长持续时间更长(P <.05),更多与头痛相关的恶心(P <.05),更多与头痛相关的流涕或流泪(P <.05),更多的头痛后综合征(P <.05),以及头痛后综合征的持续时间更长(P <.001)。
本研究描绘了一大群患者的前驱症状情况。它突出了有前驱症状患者与无前驱症状患者之间的差异,并提请注意预防急性偏头痛发作头痛阶段的可能性。