A prospective study on osmophobia in migraine versus tension-type headache in a large series of attacks

Author:

Terrin Alberto1,Mainardi Federico2ORCID,Lisotto Carlo3,Mampreso Edoardo4,Fuccaro Matteo5,Maggioni Ferdinando1,Zanchin Giorgio1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neuroscience, University of Padova, Padova, Italy

2. Headache Centre, Neurological Division, SS. Giovanni e Paolo Hospital, Venezia, Italy

3. Headache Centre, Department of Neurology, Azienda Sanitaria n. 5 Friuli Occidentale, Pordenone, Italy

4. Headache Centre, Neurology – Euganea – Padova Health Unit, Padova, Italy

5. Conegliano Hospital, Conegliano, Italy

Abstract

Background In literature, osmophobia is reported as a specific migrainous symptom with a prevalence of up to 95%. Despite the International Classification of Headache Disorders 2nd edition proposal of including osmophobia among accompanying symptoms, it was no longer mentioned in the ICHD 3rd edition. Methods We conducted a prospective study on 193 patients suffering from migraine without aura, migraine with aura, episodic tension-type headache or a combination of these. After a retrospective interview, each patient was asked to describe in detail osmophobia, when present, in the following four headache attacks. Results In all, 45.7% of migraine without aura attacks were associated with osmophobia, 67.2% of migraineurs reported osmophobia in at least a quarter of the attacks. No episodic tension-type headache attack was associated with osmophobia. It was associated with photophobia or phonophobia in 4.3% of migraine without aura attacks, and it was the only accompanying symptom in 4.7% of migraine without aura attacks. The inclusion of osmophobia in the ICHD-3 diagnostic criteria would enable a 9.0% increased diagnostic sensitivity. Conclusion Osmophobia is a specific clinical marker of migraine, easy to ascertain and able to disentangle the sometimes challenging differential diagnosis between migraine without aura and episodic tension-type headache. We recommend its inclusion among the diagnostic criteria for migraine as it increases sensitivity, showing absolute specificity.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Clinical Neurology,General Medicine

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