View clinical trials related to Migraine.
Filter by:Migraine attack is an episodic disorder that affects approximately 12% of the population. Previous studies have shown that 41-48% of migraineur have a combination of patent foramen ovale (PFO). Clinical observational studies have been linking medication therapies which include anticoagulation and anti-platelet therapy with the effectiveness in improving migraine symptoms and reducing the frequency of attacks in patients combined with a PFO. However, it has been unclear whether the effectiveness of anticoagulation or anti-platelet therapy outweigh the conventional migraine medication therapy, as a result, we designed a multi-center randomized clinical trial aiming to examine the effectiveness of anticoagulation versus anti-platelet versus migraine medication therapy in migraine patients with PFO and provide a clinical guidance for migraineur.
The study is designed as a multicenter, double-blind, randomized, sham-controlled trial to assess the safety and effectiveness of the Nocira AVPI Device for the acute treatment of migraine. The study is conducted in two phases in two study groups: - Phase I - initial screening of device operation in both active and sham modes in-clinic and as proctored by the investigator, and - Phase II - for further evaluation when used in the home (non-clinical) environment.
Headache disorders constitute a major global disease burden, and migraine - with a one-year prevalence of 15 % - is the sixth most disabling condition. Though a common disease, the pathogenesis is still unclear. Thus, the treatments have different mechanisms of action and preventive treatments are only effective in approximately 50% of chronic migraine patients. Recent evidence from mice models and a study of prolactine-associated headaches have indicated that dopamine agonists such as cabergoline might be used as a treatment of migraine. The aim of this study is to test the hypothesis that the dopamine agonist cabergoline can be used as a treatment of chronic migraine. A randomized controlled trial of 24 patients with chronic migraine will be conducted, comparing cabergoline to placebo as an add-on medication to the patients' migraine treatment over a 12 weeks period. The primary outcome is change in migraine frequency, but also headache-related hospital contacts, and quality of life as well as prolactin levels and biomarkers of the pituitary-gonadal-axis. The results of the study will help understand the pathogenesis of migraine and might also introduce a more effective and affordable preventive migraine treatment.
In this project, the aim is to recruit patients with drug resistant epilepsy and those suffering from migraine. Interestingly, patients suffering from epilepsy are also more often reporting to suffer from migraine. The pathobiology is understudied, but it is believed that both etiologies results from brain networks changes. A clinical certified 7T Terra Siemens scanner will be employed to assess in all participants (including healthy controls) how the microstructure differs in disease specific areas. Patients will further be clinically assessed as well as undergo questionnaires.
This is a prospective, observational study. The participant will be required to approve his/her participation in the study by completing the electronic consent form. Data collected within the first eight weeks (weeks 1-8) will be used to develop the prediction models (either personal or population/group models). The developed algorithm will be freezer and tested against the data collected during weeks 1-8 of a different cohort population
This study is being conducted to evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of rimegepant for migraine prophylaxis in adults with a history of inadequate response to oral preventive medications
This study is a single center, random participant selection, data analyst is blinded to patient identifiers, controlled clinical trial. The proposed study is intended to establish safety and efficacy of quantifiable electrical biomarkers for migraine that can be used to confirm a diagnosis in people that have already been screened as positive for migraine using the gold standard participative criteria set out in the International Classification of Headache disorders-3 (ICHD-3) criteria. It is hypothesized that specific brain signals can be used to distinguish between migraine patients with and without aura from normal control and tension- type headache control participants by EEG enhanced with machine learning software.
This study is being conducted to evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of rimegepant in a population of adults that are unsuitable for triptan medications due to a previous intolerance, lack of efficacy, or contraindication (including a history of clinically-relevant cardiovascular disease).
This is a multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled study assessing the effectiveness of Galcanezumab as an add-on therapy for Migraine participants on a stable migraine prophylaxis regimen including Botox with or without one other migraine prophylaxis agent (BMPT), who have persistent unmet need. The study population will consist of approximately 150 participants ages 18-65 who report at least a 30% reduction in monthly migraine days from BMPT and still experience an average of ≥ 6 migraine days per month, following International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD-3) criteria. Subjects should be stable on at least 2, but no more than 8, consecutive injection cycles of Botox. Overall migraine day reduction will be assessed in the participants based on participant self-report (via daily electronic diaries) and medical record review.
This first in-human (FIH) study of UB-313, an anti-calcitonin gene-related peptide based immunotherapeutic candidate, is designed to assess the safety, tolerability, and immunogenicity of 4 selected UB-313 dose regimens in healthy adults.