Migraine medications

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Migraine medications

Surgery

Surgery

Preoperative evaluation: Clinical
Postoperative evaluation: Clinical
General anesthetics
Local anesthetics
Neuromuscular blockers
Protein synthesis inhibitors: Aminoglycosides
Miscellaneous cell wall synthesis inhibitors
Cell wall synthesis inhibitors: Cephalosporins
DNA synthesis inhibitors: Metronidazole
DNA synthesis inhibitors: Fluoroquinolones
Laxatives and cathartics
Anticoagulants: Heparin
Anticoagulants: Warfarin
Anticoagulants: Direct factor inhibitors
Antiplatelet medications
Acetaminophen (Paracetamol)
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
Glucocorticoids
Opioid agonists, mixed agonist-antagonists and partial agonists
Insulins
Abdominal pain: Clinical
Esophageal surgical conditions: Clinical
Gastrointestinal bleeding: Clinical
Peptic ulcers and stomach cancer: Clinical
Appendicitis: Clinical
Appendicitis: Pathology review
Diverticular disease: Clinical
Hernias: Clinical
Bowel obstruction: Clinical
Colorectal cancer: Clinical
Abdominal trauma: Clinical
Anal conditions: Clinical
Gallbladder disorders: Clinical
Gallbladder disorders: Pathology review
Pancreatitis: Clinical
Pancreatitis: Pathology review
Adrenal masses and tumors: Clinical
Breast cancer: Clinical
Breast cancer: Pathology review
Benign breast conditions: Pathology review
Skin and soft tissue infections: Clinical
Anatomy clinical correlates: Anterior and posterior abdominal wall
Anatomy clinical correlates: Breast
Anatomy clinical correlates: Viscera of the gastrointestinal tract
Anatomy clinical correlates: Peritoneum and diaphragm
Anatomy clinical correlates: Other abdominal organs
Coronary artery disease: Clinical
Valvular heart disease: Clinical
Pericardial disease: Clinical
Aortic aneurysms and dissections: Clinical
Chest trauma: Clinical
Reading a chest X-ray
Pleural effusion: Clinical
Pneumothorax: Clinical
Pleural effusion, pneumothorax, hemothorax and atelectasis: Pathology review
Lung cancer: Clinical
Anatomy clinical correlates: Thoracic wall
Anatomy clinical correlates: Heart
Anatomy clinical correlates: Pleura and lungs
Anatomy clinical correlates: Mediastinum
Adrenergic antagonists: Beta blockers
ACE inhibitors, ARBs and direct renin inhibitors
cGMP mediated smooth muscle vasodilators
Lipid-lowering medications: Statins
Lipid-lowering medications: Fibrates
Miscellaneous lipid-lowering medications
Benign hyperpigmented skin lesions: Clinical
Skin cancer: Clinical
Blistering skin disorders: Clinical
Bites and stings: Clinical
Burns: Clinical
Dizziness and vertigo: Clinical
Thyroid nodules and thyroid cancer: Clinical
Thyroid nodules and thyroid cancer: Pathology review
Parathyroid conditions and calcium imbalance: Clinical
Neck trauma: Clinical
Nasal, oral and pharyngeal diseases: Pathology review
Antihistamines for allergies
Stroke: Clinical
Seizures: Clinical
Headaches: Clinical
Traumatic brain injury: Clinical
Brain tumors: Clinical
Lower back pain: Clinical
Anatomy clinical correlates: Vertebral canal
Anatomy clinical correlates: Spinal cord pathways
Anticonvulsants and anxiolytics: Barbiturates
Anticonvulsants and anxiolytics: Benzodiazepines
Nonbenzodiazepine anticonvulsants
Migraine medications
Migraine
Osmotic diuretics
Thrombolytics
Shock: Clinical
Eye conditions: Refractive errors, lens disorders and glaucoma: Pathology review
Eye conditions: Retinal disorders: Pathology review
Eye conditions: Inflammation, infections and trauma: Pathology review
Anatomy and physiology of the eye
Pediatric ophthalmological conditions: Clinical
Joint pain: Clinical
Back pain: Pathology review
Anatomy clinical correlates: Clavicle and shoulder
Anatomy clinical correlates: Axilla
Anatomy clinical correlates: Arm, elbow and forearm
Anatomy clinical correlates: Wrist and hand
Anatomy clinical correlates: Median, ulnar and radial nerves
Anatomy clinical correlates: Bones, joints and muscles of the back
Concussion and traumatic brain injury
Traumatic brain injury: Pathology review
Abdominal hernias
Prostate disorders and cancer: Pathology review
Testicular tumors: Pathology review
Kidney stones: Clinical
Renal cysts and cancer: Clinical
Urinary incontinence: Pathology review
Testicular and scrotal conditions: Pathology review
Anatomy clinical correlates: Male pelvis and perineum
Anatomy clinical correlates: Female pelvis and perineum
Androgens and antiandrogens
PDE5 inhibitors
Adrenergic antagonists: Alpha blockers
Peripheral vascular disease: Clinical
Leg ulcers: Clinical
Aortic dissections and aneurysms: Pathology review

Transcript

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Migraine medications include a wide variety of drugs used to treat a specific type of headache called migraine.

Migraines are the second most common primary headache.

They’re often preceded by symptoms like irritability, depression, and fatigue that can begin hours to days before the headache itself. Sometimes there can be an aura where people experience strange smells, lights, visual disturbances, or even hallucinations before the onset of the migraine.

The migraine itself usually feels like a pounding or pulsating, typically localized to one side of the head and can last from hours to days.

As if this was not bad enough, these headaches tend to come with nausea and vomiting, irritability, and pain or discomfort with lights, sounds, and smells called photophobia, phonophobia, and osmophobia, respectively.

During childhood, individuals can have nausea and vomiting without the headaches; and that’s called an abdominal migraine.

After a migraine is over, it can leave people feeling sore at the location of the pain and generally fatigued.

To remember the main features of migraines, you can use the mnemonic POUND, where P stands for pulsatile headache, O stands for one-day duration, U stands for unilateral, N for nausea, and D for disabling.

Although the underlying mechanism causing migraines isn’t well understood, there are some clues.

Concentrations of the neurotransmitter, serotonin, increase during the aura, triggering vasoconstriction, and then decrease to lower-than-normal levels during the migraine attack, triggering vasodilation. This change in the blood vessel size may be a trigger for pain receptors, causing the headache.

The initial vasoconstriction may also trigger cortical spreading depression, which is a phenomenon when the brain becomes hypersensitive to certain stimuli like lights, sounds, and smells.

Migraines are often associated with specific triggers like the smell of cigarette smoke, foods like chocolate or cheese, and drinking wine.

Even sleeping too much or too little can sometimes trigger a migraine.

There are two treatment approaches for migraine: acute treatment to help manage the pain; and preventive treatment to keep headaches from happening in the first place, in individuals that have severe, debilitating headaches.

The acute treatment includes common analgesic drugs, triptans, and ergot alkaloids.

For people with mild or moderate symptoms, initial treatment may involve only analgesics, such as NSAIDs or the opioid agonist butorphanol.

Acutely, pain medications work best if they’re used at the first sign of an attack, during the early symptoms, and aura.

If the pain is very severe, triptans or ergotamine, which are serotonin agonists, can be useful because they mimic serotonin to cause vasoconstriction.

So, triptans should be prescribed when people with mild symptoms don’t respond to analgesics, or when symptoms are moderate to severe.

The common suffix for these medications is -triptan, like sumatriptan, zolmitriptan, naratriptan, or rizatriptan.

All of them can be given by mouth, but this may be impractical for people who have nausea or vomiting during the attack. For these situations, subcutaneous injections or a nasal spray of sumatriptan are available.

Triptans are agonists at 5-HT1B and 5HT1D serotonin receptors, therefore preventing vasoactive peptide release, reducing trigeminal nerve activation, and causing vasoconstriction.

Side effects are generally mild, and include mild pain or burning sensations at the site of injection, paresthesia, fatigue, or dizziness, when given per orally.

In addition, not only do they cause vasoconstriction on the blood vessels in the brain, but also in other blood vessels, which can raise blood pressure.

Also, as it causes coronary vasospasm, it can bring about a type of chest pain called angina. Although it’s an uncommon side effect, that’s why triptans are contraindicated in people with hypertension, coronary artery disease, prinzmetal angina, and peripheral vascular disease.

It can also rarely cause myocardial ischemia or infarction, and arrhythmias as well.

Now, when used together with other serotonin receptor agonists, triptans can induce a serotonin syndrome, that comprises of cognitive symptoms, like headache, hallucinations, or coma; somatic symptoms, like tremors or hyperreflexia; and autonomic symptoms like tachycardia, nausea, diarrhoea, shivering, and sweating. So, people who have recently been given ergot alkaloids or other serotonin agonists mustn’t use triptans, at least for 24 hours.

Okay so, sometimes, NSAIDs or triptans aren’t effective to relieve the symptoms. So we can move on to the ergot alkaloids, or simply ‘ergots’, which include ergotamine and dihydroergotamine.

Ergotamine can be administered in sublingual tablets, and dihydroergotamine can be injected or used as a nasal spray.

Ergots are also agonist at 5-HT serotonin receptors. However, they're not specific for 5-HT1 receptors, and that means they have more side effects than triptans.

For example, when they stimulate 5HT3 receptors in the vomiting center of the brain, they can trigger nausea or vomiting.

Also, just like triptans, ergot alkaloids causes vasoconstriction and are contraindicated in people with coronary artery disease or hypertension.

In a similar aspect, as ergot stimulate contraction of the smooth muscle in the wall of blood vessels, they also stimulate contraction of the uterine smooth muscle, an oxytocic effect that can lead to premature labor in pregnant women, causing fetal distress and miscarriage. So, they’re contraindicated during pregnancy.

Ergot alkaloids are widely metabolized in the liver, that’s why they’re contraindicated in patients with liver impairment.

Sources

  1. "Katzung & Trevor's Pharmacology Examination and Board Review,12th Edition" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2018)
  2. "Rang and Dale's Pharmacology" Elsevier (2019)
  3. "Goodman and Gilman's The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics, 13th Edition" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2017)
  4. "Treatment of acute migraine headache" Am Fam Physician (2011)
  5. "Migraine Headache Prophylaxis" Am Fam Physician (2019)
  6. "Spotlight on Anti-CGRP Monoclonal Antibodies in Migraine: The Clinical Evidence to Date" Clin Pharmacol Drug Dev (2017)
  7. "Triptans and ergot alkaloids in the acute treatment of migraine: similarities and differences" Expert Review of Neurotherapeutics (2013)
  8. "The pathophysiology of migraine: implications for clinical management" Lancet Neurol (2018)