View clinical trials related to Migraine.
Filter by:Migraine patients are oftentimes referred for evidence based behavioral therapies to prevent migraine. Yet, at follow-up visits, they report not seeing the behavioral therapist. This is a pilot feasibility acceptability study to assess whether motivational interviewing (MI) can be implemented in the headache center setting to help improve initiation and adherence to behavioral therapy for migraine. We will also assess patients' reasons for making/not making the appointment.
Researchers are trying to determine if there is a difference between brain images of subjects that do respond to treatment with erenumab and subjects who do not respond to treatment with erenumab using Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI).
Patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) struggle on a daily basis with accompanying, "Invisible" symptoms like primary fatigue, pain and emotional-cognitive disorders. With the disease progression, these symptoms only intensify, and in combination with basic physical symptoms, quality of life (QOL) rapidly decreases. An important goal of researchers and clinicians involves improving the QOL of individuals with MS, and the exercise therapy represents potentially modifiable behavior that positively impacts on pathogenesis of MS and these "Invisible" symptoms, thus improving the QOL. However, the main barrier for its application is low motivational level that MS patients experience due to fatigue with adjacent reduced exercise tolerability and mobility, and muscle weakness. Getting individuals with MS motivated to engage in continuous physical activity may be particularly difficult and challenging, especially those with severe disability or Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS 6-8). Till now, researchers have focused their attention mainly on the moderate or vigorous intensity of exercise and on cardiorespiratory training in MS patients to achieve improvements in daily life quality, less indicating the exercise content, and most importantly, breathing exercises. In addition, it is investigators intention to make exercise for MS patients more applicable and accessible, motivational and easier, but most important, productive. Investigators think that MS patients experience more stress with aerobic exercise or moderate to high intensity program exercise, and can hardly keep continuum including endurance exercise, or treadmill. Hypothesis: Investigators hypothesis is that 8-weeks of continuous low demanding or mild exercise program with the accent on breathing exercise can attenuate primary fatigue, pain, headaches, emotional-cognitive and sleep dysfunctions in MS patients and provide maintenance of exercise motivation. Investigators also propose that important assistant factor for final goal achievement is social and mental support of the exercise group (EDSS from 0-8) led by a physiotherapist. This will help to maintain exercise motivation and finally make better psychophysical functioning, and thus better QOL.
Migraine is common in adolescents and can cause missed school and disability. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends that high schools start no earlier than 8:30 AM in order to accommodate the physiologic needs of adolescents-whose brains naturally want to fall asleep later and wake up later and who still need to get at least 8 hours of sleep per night to function optimally-however, only about 18% of US high schools comply with this AAP recommendation. There is a relationship between adequate sleep and migraine. The investigators aim to determine whether high school students with migraine who attend high schools that comply with this AAP recommendation have lower migraine frequency than those that do not. If so, it would argue for advocating for changes in high school policy to optimize health of adolescents with migraine.
This is a multi-center registry that will prospectively collect regulatory compliant data from children and adolescents with migraine. This study will enroll approximately 200 participants from approximately 20 sites and will examine migraine symptoms, therapeutics used, and biomarkers associated with migraine.
The purpose of this is study is to compare the efficacy of BHV-3000 (rimegepant) to placebo as a preventive treatment for migraine, as measured by the reduction in the number of migraine days per month.
Background: Preventive drug therapy in migraine aims to reduce the attack frequency, severity and duration of headache. Flunarizine and topiramate are widely used in the prevention of migraine attacks. Greater occipital nerve block (GONB) is an alternative treatment option for the prophylactic treatment of migraine. In this study, investigators compared the effectiveness of GONB, topiramate, and flunarizine in terms of reduction in post-treatment VAS scores and attack frequencies in patients with episodic migraine in a four-week period. Material and Methods: At least one hundred and twenty migraine patients are aimed to be randomly divided into three treatment groups, namely flunarizine (n=40, estimated), topiramate (n=40, estimated) and GONB (n=40, estimated). The patients will be followed up for four weeks and the attack frequencies and VAS scores will be recorded weekly. At the end of the fourth week, the response rates based on 50% and 75% or more reduction in the VAS scores and attack frequencies will be calculated. Group-wise comparisons will be assessed statistically.
This is a single-center, open-label, randomized, four-way crossover study. Each subject will receive each of the four study treatments once, followed by in-clinic monitoring and extensive blood sample collection for pharmacokinetic analysis. Dosing will occur approximately 48 hours apart, until completion of dosing in randomized order per the treatment sequence tables. Plasma samples from the dosing days will be sent to the analytical laboratory for analysis and tolerability for each of the dose levels will be summarized. After completion of the four dosing days, subjects will be assessed one final time and dismissed from the study.
Little is known about who adheres to migraine management strategies, and circumstances that enhance adherence. This knowledge is required to develop patient-level interventions to improve adherence to migraine management strategies. The proposed project will pilot the first patient level intervention designed to improve adherence to preventive and acute migraine management strategies. The study will identify people most at risk for non-adherence to migraine management strategies. Participants will be randomly assigned to receive a tailored clinical decision support tool or education intervention.
Migraine headache is one of the disabling conditions that may be associated with decreased quality of life, anxiety and depression. Currently, therapeutic approach to migraine is mostly based on prophylactic and acute phase medication therapy. Some investigators consider migraine a biopsychosocial condition which means that psychological therapies, such as cognitive-behavioral therapy and relaxation, may be efficient in controlling the disease. According to previous studies, cognitive therapies, including cognitive-behavioral therapy, have been efficient in decreasing frequency and severity of migraine, however, there are some challenges in applying these kind of interventions: the expenses; presence of multiple commodities that may lead to confusion and bewilderment for both therapist and patient; small number of trained psychologists for this intervention. The trans-diagnostic approach, however, can facilitate some challenges with the previous method. Since it is not focused on a single condition, trained psychologists with this approach can apply it for a wide range of conditions, including migraine. Also, the trans-diagnostic approach leads to lower chances of confusion and bewilderment for therapist and patients. The trans-diagnostic approach focuses on therapeutic modules instead of constant similar therapeutic models. The five cores of trans-diagnostic approach are emotional awareness, cognitive flexibility, recognizing and preventing emotion avoidance and maladaptive emotion driven behaviors, awareness and tolerance of emotion-related physical conditions, and introceptive and situation-based emotion-focused exposure. This method was first designed to replace cognitive-behavioral therapy for emotional disorders, due to its feasibility and applicability. The trans-diagnostic approach has been investigated by several researchers so far, however, most of those researches evaluate the efficacy of the technique on psychiatric disorders. It has also been investigated for treatment of headaches in adolescents. But no other study on other clinical problems or migraine has been conducted. Considering the high rates of comorbid anxiety and depressive symptoms in migrainous patients and the feasibility and efficacy of trans-diagnostic cognitive-behavioral therapy in other conditions, we aimed to evaluate its efficacy on controlling headache and related symptoms among migrainous patients.