Changes in headache frequency in premenopausal obese women with migraine after bariatric surgery: A case series

Author:

Novack V1,Fuchs L1,Lantsberg L1,Kama S1,Lahoud U1,Horev A1,Loewenthal N1,Ifergane G1

Affiliation:

1. Soroka University Medical Center, Israel.

Abstract

Background: The association between migraine and obesity gives the clinician with an exciting possibility to alleviate migraine suffering through weight-reduction gastric-restrictive operations. We hypothesized that bariatric weight-reduction intervention (gastric banding) will be associated with reduction of migraine burden in this population. Methods: A total of 105 women between 18 and 50 years of age, admitted for bariatric surgery between April 2006 and February 2007, were screened for migraine. Twenty-nine with diagnosis of migraine were enrolled into the prospective phase. We followed the migraine pattern of these patients for 6 months post bariatric surgery. Results: Baseline median migraine frequency was six headache days a month. Post bariatric surgery, the migraine-suffering women reported of a lower frequency of migraine attacks ( p < 0.001), shorter duration of the attacks ( p = 0.02), lower medication use during the attack ( p = 0.005), less non-migraine pain (44.8 vs. 33%, p = 0.05), and post-bariatric surgery reduction in headache-related disability assessed by the MIDAS and HIT-6 scores. There was a reduction in migraine frequency among both episodic (from four to one episodes a month) and chronic (from 16.8 to 8.5 episodes per month) migraine patient cohorts separately and combined. Conclusions: Among migraine-suffering premenopausal obese women, we found a reduced frequency of migraine attacks and improvement of headache-related disability post bariatric surgery. Our findings should be interpreted cautiously. The absence of a control group and the non-blinded nature of our small study make it difficult to draw firm conclusions about the causal nature of the headache changes observed in this population. Further study is needed to evaluate the possible specific effects of surgical weight loss on migraine in obese women.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Neurology (clinical),General Medicine

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1. Behavioral therapy in migraine: Expanding the therapeutic arsenal;European Journal of Neurology;2024-07-21

2. Stroke and stroke risk factors in women of reproductive age with a history of metabolic or bariatric surgery;Journal of Stroke and Cerebrovascular Diseases;2022-12

3. Bariatric Surgery in Migraine patients: CGRP Level and Weight Loss;Obesity Surgery;2022-08-03

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