View clinical trials related to Headache.
Filter by:IIn this study, the investigators planned to investigate effectiveness of supplemental oxygen in patients (18-65 years) who were diagnosed as headache related to migraine without aura in the emergency department (ED). Patients who will be ordered standard migraine therapy (50 mg dexketoprofen and 10 mg metoclopramide HCl in 100 cc normal saline IV) by the physician blind to research, will be evaluated by the researchers before the treatment and patients met the study criteria will be included. Included patients randomly divided to two group, study group will receive supplemental oxygen with face mask for 1 hour. Patients' visual analog score (VAS) will be measured at 0th, 15th, 30th and 60th minute of treatment. If there will not be a 50% decrease at VAS score from the beginning, patients will be examined again by the physician again. Patients who will be ordered 100 mg tramadol as rescue therapy by the physician, will be continued to observed, VAS scores will be measured at 120th minute again. To avoid drug related bias, patients who will be ordered any other drug for primary care or rescue treatment other than mentioned above will not be included into the study.
This study aims to verify the efficacy / effectiveness of treatment with transcranial direct therapy (TDCS) in patients with Persistent Covid who present headaches, migraines and chronic pain, such as arthralgias and myalgias. Transcranial Direct Therapy is used in the field of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation, with results that prove to be effective for the treatment of patients suffering from symptoms such as migraines, headaches, chronic pain, fibromyalgia or chronic neuropathic pain. As can be seen, in the case of patients with Persistent Covid we find several of these symptoms, so it is suggested that, if Transcranial Direct Current Therapy (TDCs) is giving such good results, relieving these symptoms, why can not give such good results and help so much in patients with Persistent Covid, If many of the symptoms are the same, even if the origin or cause is different.
This study relies on the use of a smartphone application (SOMA) that the investigators developed for tracking daily mood, pain, and activity status in acute pain, chronic pain, and healthy controls over four months.The primary goal of the study is to use fluctuations in daily self-reported symptoms to identify computational predictors of acute-chronic pain transition, pain recovery, and/or chronic pain maintenance or flareups. The general study will include anyone with current acute or chronic pain, while a smaller sub-study will use a subset of patients from the chronic pain group who have been diagnosed with chronic low back pain, failed back surgery syndrome, or fibromyalgia. These sub-study participants will first take part in one in-person EEG testing session while completing simple interoception and reinforcement learning tasks and then begin daily use of the SOMA app. Electrophysiologic and behavioral data from the EEG testing session will be used to determine predictors of treatment response in the sub-study.
A prospective study that investigates the impact of circadian rhythm disturbances due to daylight saving time transitions on migraine patients. The Primary aim is to investigate the impact of springtime DST (March 12 2023 at 2 AM on Sunday) on sleep metrics in patients with migraine headaches. Secondary aim is to examine the association between incidence of migraine headaches and sleep metrics with time transitions. Participants will be provided with a Withings non-wearable/contactless sleep tracker, which will be placed under the mattress for a period of 4 weeks (2 weeks before and 2 weeks after) during daylight saving time transition in March, 2023. Withings Health Mate app will be downloaded to the participant's smartphone to collect Sleep Data. Headache diaries will be provided to log the details of the migraines during the study period. Morningness - eveningness questionnaire (MEQ) will be used to categorize subjects on the chronotype spectrum.
Currently there is limited evidence of benefit for the addition of steroids to occipital nerve blocks for treatment of headache, and not all steroids have been explored. The purpose of this research is to learn more about whether the addition of a specific kind of steroid (dexamethasone) provides any additional benefit to nerve blocks.
Chronic migraine patients treated with OnabotulinumtoxinA may experience breakthrough headaches, especially toward the end of their 12-week therapy. The addition of a CGRPmAb could help in decreasing or eliminating these episodes, but this combination is considered "experimental" by many payers, which often leads to a denial of coverage. Currently, there is no reference in the literature or data to support the treatment of chronic migraine with OnabotulinumtoxinA and CGRPmAbs (Aimovig, Ajovy, Emgality or Vyepti) combination therapy. This has resulted in many patients and providers having to settle for one or the other. Investigators hopes to provide crucial data and findings to support the addition of CGRPmAb in some chronic migraine patients currently on monotherapy OnabotulinumtoxinA.
The goal of this observational analytic study with a cohort desing is to evaluate the epidemiology, risk factors and clinical phenotype of headache during Influenza infection. The study will be done in collaboration with the Healthcare Sentinel Network of Castile and Leon (Red Centinela Sanitaria de Castilla y León, RCSCYL) and the National Influenza Center of Valladolid (CNGV). First, the historical data of the VIGIRA network of the 2010-2022 flu seasons will be analyzed, assessing the epidemiology and risk factors of headache during Influenza infection; and second, a study with a case series design with prospective follow-up will be carried out for the incident cases of the 2022-2023 and 2023-2024 Influenza seasons, evaluating the clinical phenotype and the duration of the headache.
The aim of this clinical trial is to test a wrist-worn nerve stimulator in adolescents with chronic migraine/headache and mood disturbance. The main question it aims to answer is whether this device is effective in relieving clinical symptoms including pain, anxiety, depression and sleep disturbance. Participants will wear the device for twelve weeks and complete monthly surveys throughout the study.
Postdural puncture headache (PDPH) is a frequent complication after neuraxial anaesthesia due to accidental puncture of the dura mater. After spinal anaesthesia, the rate of PDPH may reach up to 28,7% of cases. PDPH is more common in females, especially obstetric patients, young age and more after epidural than spinal anaesthesia because of needle type. PDPH interferes with the patient's ability to resume activities, prolongs the hospital stay, and causes chronic headaches in up to 28% of cases. Several treatment modalities were described for PDPH. Conservative treatment, an epidural blood patch, peripheral nerve blocks, such as sphenopalatine ganglion block (SPGB) and more excellent occipital nerve block (GONB) using local anaesthetic block or through percutaneous radiofrequency ablation or direct injection of local anaesthetic and steroid directly into the neck muscles; were all proven effective in treating PDPH. Radiofrequency (RF) is a commonly used technique to treat different types of pain, headaches, and musculoskeletal abnormalities. The second-generation non-invasive RF modality was recently developed as Tecar therapy (TECAR: Capacitive and Resistive Energy Transfer). Tecar therapy provided promising results in treating chronic pelvic and postpartum perineal pain. To our knowledge, Tecar therapy efficacy in treating PDPH has not been evaluated before. This study aims to assess the effectiveness of Tecar therapy as a non-invasive technique for treating PDPH. This study hypothesizes that Tecar therapy could be an effective non-invasive technique for treating or reducing PDPH.
To investigate whether sildenafil (phosphodiesterase 5 inhibitor) induces migraine-like headache in people with persistent post-traumatic headache (PTH) attributed to mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI).