View clinical trials related to Migraine.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and efficacy of galcanezumab in people with treatment-resistant episodic or chronic migraine.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether using a smart phone application to foster communication between study participants and their doctor will impact care. Participants must have a history of migraine or have recently been prescribed a common medicine to treat migraine. The study will last about one year for each participant.
This study will assess the safety and efficacy of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) as new preventive treatment of migraine.
Introduction According to the World Health Organization (WHO) at least 47% of adults have suffered from headache in the last year. The headache is not only painful but also disabling, it can be accompanied by social and personal problems, with a decrease in the quality of life and with economic losses. Migraine affects a large number of people and, if the predisposing factors are not controlled, it can become chronic. Once the chronification point of migraine has arrived, it seriously affects the quality of life of people, both in the workplace, social and leisure. objective Perform the application of a manual therapy treatment based on protocols that include techniques already proven to improve different areas of impact in patients with migraine. To evaluate various aspects, we will include the intensity of pain, the frequency of episodes, anxiety and depression, quality of life, etc ... and the limitations or disability that it produces. Material and methods This is a prospective, single-blind, randomized study with patients diagnosed with migraine. The sample will be distributed in 4 groups: a) experimental group that will receive combined treatment of soft tissues with techniques evidenced independently; b) Group that will receive independent structural techniques; c) the group that will receive the set of protocols a and b; d) and the placebo control group. Evaluation An initial assessment will be carried out, another at the end of the treatment and another follow-up one month after the end of the treatment. In addition, the evaluation will include the following instruments: the HDI scale (Headache Disability Inventory), the MIDAS scale (Migraine Disability Assessment Scale), the SF-36 Questionnaire, the EVA Scale (Visual-Analogue Scale), the HIT-6 Questionnaire, the BDI Questionnaire (Beck Inventory Depression), the STAI Questionnaire (The State-Trait Anxiety Inventory), the change perceived after the treatment and medication intake.
To develop a pragmatic migraine model the investigators will induce headache in healthy volunteers and in patients with migraine without aura with aCalcitonine Gene Related Peptide (CGRP). If the headache responds to sumatriptan, the model can be used to test new drug candidates.
This expanded access program is designed to make fremanezumab available to patients with EM or CM who have successfully completed (per protocol) Teva-sponsored Study TV48125-CNS-30051 or TV48125-CNS-30068 ("prior studies") until fremanezumab becomes commercially available in their country.
The aim of the study is to retrospectively evaluate brain perfusion and oxygenation in acute migraine attacks. Magnetic resonance perfusion and susceptibility weighted imaging are the technics to measure perfusion and oxygenation respectively.
The purpose of the study is to assess the feasibility of a Creative Artists Program intervention with epilepsy and headache patients admitted to Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center for care by the Department of Neurology.
This study investigates molecular and physical biomarkers of headaches in order to better understand mechanisms of these diseases. There are 3 main parts: 1. Use of capsaicin (active ingredient in hot chili peppers) to trigger release of calcitonin gene related peptide - the hypothesis is that this will be different in headache subjects compared to controls (and if so might be used to predict how these patients will respond to certain medications that modulate calcitonin gene-related peptide). Subjects will be given capsaicin as a cream applied to the forehead or the inner nostril, or a hot sauce that is ingested. 2. Use of capsaicin to trigger eye watering - the hypothesis is that oxygen gas will slow down the amount of eye watering. Cluster headache patients respond very powerfully to oxygen gas but to very little else. The mechanism for oxygen is unknown but in rodents there is data that it works on the parasympathetic / lacrimal gland system. This study translates rodent data into humans in a non-invasive way to confirm the mechanism of this very effective treatment. 3. Use of ice water to trigger headaches - brain freeze causes a very short-lived but intense headache that may cause similar biomarker release as other headache disorders. This may be a useful human model for other headache disorders.
To evaluate the effect of Introvision, a mental and emotional self-regulation-technique developed by Angelika C. Wager, as migraine preventative compared to a waiting list group.