Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA.
Center for the Prevention and Treatment of Visual Loss, Iowa VA Health Care System, Iowa City, IA, USA.
Headache. 2020 Sep;60(8):1581-1591. doi: 10.1111/head.13898. Epub 2020 Jul 25.
To determine whether patients with vestibular migraine are more likely to suffer from an occipital headache than patients with migraine without vestibular symptoms.
Vestibular migraine is an underdiagnosed disorder in which migraine is associated with vestibular symptoms. Anatomical evidence and symptomatology hint at the involvement of brain structures in the posterior fossa (back of the head location). We hypothesized that vestibular migraine patients are more likely than migraineurs without vestibular symptoms to experience headaches located in the back of the head, that is, occipital headaches.
A retrospective cross-sectional study was conducted at the University of Iowa Hospital and Clinics. Chart analysis of 169 patients was performed. The primary outcome was the location of the headache in vestibular migraine patients and migraineurs without vestibular symptoms. The secondary outcomes included the association of vestibular migraine with gender, age at onset of headache, age at onset of vestibular symptoms (such as vertigo, head motion-induced dizziness), aura, motion sickness, other associated symptoms, family history of headaches, and family history of motion sickness.
In vestibular migraine group, 45/103 (44%) had occipital location for their headaches vs 12/66 (18%) in migraine patients without vestibular symptoms, for an odd's ratio of 3.5 (95% CI = 1.7-7.2, P < .001). Additionally, the age at onset of headache was greater in the vestibular migraine group (28 ± 12 vs 18 ± 9 years, P < .001) and motion sickness was more common (41/98 (42%) in the vestibular migraine group, 1/64 (2%) in the migraine without vestibular symptoms group, P < .001).
This study suggests that patients with vestibular migraine are more likely to have occipital headaches than patients with migraine without vestibular symptoms. Our data support the initiation of a prospective study to determine whether a patient presenting with occipital headaches, with late onset of age of headache, and with a history of motion sickness is at an increased risk for the possible development of vestibular migraine.
确定前庭性偏头痛患者是否比无前庭症状的偏头痛患者更容易出现枕部头痛。
前庭性偏头痛是一种未被充分诊断的疾病,偏头痛伴有前庭症状。解剖学证据和症状学提示脑后部(头后部位置)的结构参与其中。我们假设,与无前庭症状的偏头痛患者相比,前庭性偏头痛患者更有可能出现位于头部后部的头痛,即枕部头痛。
在爱荷华大学医院和诊所进行了一项回顾性横断面研究。对 169 名患者的图表进行了分析。主要结局是前庭性偏头痛患者和无前庭症状的偏头痛患者头痛的位置。次要结局包括前庭性偏头痛与性别、头痛发作年龄、前庭症状(如眩晕、头部运动引起的头晕)发作年龄、先兆、晕动病、其他相关症状、头痛家族史和晕动病家族史的关系。
在前庭性偏头痛组中,103 例患者中有 45 例(44%)的头痛位于枕部,而 66 例无前庭症状的偏头痛患者中仅有 12 例(18%),比值比为 3.5(95%置信区间=1.7-7.2,P<0.001)。此外,前庭性偏头痛组的头痛发作年龄更大(28±12 岁 vs 18±9 岁,P<0.001),晕动病更为常见(41/98(42%)在前庭性偏头痛组,1/64(2%)在无前庭症状的偏头痛组,P<0.001)。
本研究表明,与无前庭症状的偏头痛患者相比,前庭性偏头痛患者更有可能出现枕部头痛。我们的数据支持开展一项前瞻性研究,以确定出现枕部头痛、头痛发作年龄较晚、有晕动病病史的患者是否有更高的发生前庭性偏头痛的风险。