[My] Life in Wisconsin

Migraines with Aura in Middle Age Associated with Late-Life Brain Lesions


http://www.nih.gov/news/health/jun2009/nia-23.htm
Embargoed for Release Tuesday, June 23, 2009 4:00 p.m. EDT
Contact: Barbara Cire 301-496-1752

Migraines with Aura in Middle Age Associated with Late-Life Brain Lesions

Women who suffer from migraine headaches in middle age accompanied by neurological aura (visual disturbances, dizziness or numbness that can precede migraines) are more likely to have damage to brain tissue in the cerebellum later in life, according to a study by researchers at the National Institute on Aging (NIA) of the National Institutes of Health, the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences and the Icelandic Heart Association in Reykjavik. Researchers noted that many people have these types of "silent" brain lesions, but their effect on physical and cognitive function in older people is not well studied.

The study appears in the June 24, 2009, issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. The researchers found that women are more susceptible than men to localized brain tissue damage identified on magnetic resonance images (MRI) and that women who reported having migraines with aura were almost twice as likely to have such damage in the cerebellum as women who reported not having headaches.

Researchers noted that while the study shows an association in women between migraine and cerebellar tissue damage later in life, the functional significance of such brain changes remains an open question. The cerebellum is located in the lower back side of the brain and is involved in functions such as motor activity, balance and cognition.

"This long-term population-based study increases interest in determining whether migraine could be a risk factor for brain lesions with clinical consequences over time," said NIA Director Richard J. Hodes, M.D. "Further research should help us better understand what these changes may mean for individuals and for brain function with age."

Migraine headaches affect approximately 11 percent of adults and 5 percent of children worldwide and are more common in women than in men. Migraines are often accompanied by extreme sensitivity to light and sound, nausea and vomiting. Some individuals with migraine also experience neurological aura symptoms, including temporary visual disturbances that can appear as flashing lights, zig-zag lines or loss of vision.

This study examined migraine headaches in a community-dwelling cohort of older people. Between 1972 and 1986, when participants were middle-aged (average age 50.9), they were asked about type and frequency of headaches. MRI scans of the cortex and cerebellum brain regions were conducted on 4,600 study participants between 2002 and 2006, when participants� average age was 76.2.

Participants were divided into four groups: migraine headache with aura once or more per month, migraine headache without aura, nonmigraine headache and no headache. The researchers found that overall, 17 percent of the women were classified as having migraine headaches, including 10.3 percent with migraine with aura. Only 5.7 percent of men were classified as having migraine.

Overall, MRI scans revealed the presence of any brain lesion in 39.3 percent of the men and 24.6 percent of the women. Prevalence of cerebellar lesions in women with migraine with aura was 23.0 percent vs. 14.5 percent for women not reporting headaches. There was no statistically significant difference in prevalence of these lesions in men (19.3 vs. 21.3 percent).

"After adjusting for risk factors for cardiovascular disease, transient ischemic attack or stroke in middle age or late life, we found that women who suffered from migraines with aura in middle age had an almost twofold increased risk of brain lesions in the cerebellum later in life," said Lenore Launer, Ph.D., senior author and chief of the neuroepidemiology section of the Laboratory of Epidemiology, Demography, and Biometry in the NIA�s Intramural Research Program. "We are currently investigating the clinical implications of these brain lesions in this group of individuals. We are also interested in whether this association represents a cause and effect relationship or whether some other factors are responsible for the apparent association. The findings from this study are consistent with those from a previous study conducted in younger people using a similar protocol."

Participants were part of the Reykjavik Study and the Age Gene/Environment Susceptibility-Reykjavik Study (AGES-RS). Originally established to study heart disease in Iceland, the Reykjavik Study includes a random sample of men and women born between 1907 and 1935 and living in Reykjavik at the beginning of the study in 1967. In 2002, AGES-RS continued the Reykjavik Study to examine risk factors, genetic susceptibility and gene-environment interactions in relation to disease and disability in later life.

This study was funded by the National Institute on Aging, the Icelandic Heart Association and the Icelandic Parliament. Components of the study were also supported by the National Eye Institute, the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute and the Migraine Research Foundation.

The NIA leads the federal effort supporting and conducting research on aging and the medical, social and behavioral issues of older people. For more information on research and aging, go to www.nia.nih.gov.
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) — The Nation's Medical Research Agency — includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is the primary federal agency for conducting and supporting basic, clinical and translational medical research, and it investigates the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit www.nih.gov.Citation:
Scher, Ann I., et al., Migraine Headache in Middle Age and Late-Life Brain Infarcts. Journal of the American Medical Association, June 24, 2009�Vol. 301, No. 24, 2563�2570.

Author Affiliations:
National Institute on Aging, Bethesda, MD (Lenore J. Launer); Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD (Ann I. Scher and Anna Ghambaryan); University of Iceland, Reykjavik, (Larus S. Gudmundsson); The Icelandic Heart Association, Kopavogur, (Sigurdur Sigurdsson, Thor Aspelund, Vilmundur Gudnason, and Gudny Eiriksdottir); and Department of Radiology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, the Netherlands (Mark A. van Buchem).

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I knew there is an increased risk of stroke since my migraines are (generally) preceded with the aura...
Now I have to worry about being goofy too...

XOXO
Me

12 comments:

  1. Oh great I see auras on a pretty regular basis.. ..

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  2. Your already goofy..hehe

    sorry couldnt resist!

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  3. I don't know that much about migraines since I've only had maybe a half dozen in my lifetime.

    What is the aura thing they're talking about? Is that like seeing halos, or a spiritual aura?

    The migraines I get always begin with seeing little neon squiggly looking things all around my peripheral vision. If I hit the aspirin bottle quick enough and go lay down I usually don't develop a full blown migraine. If I do get a full blown migraine the little squiggly things grow and will completely obscure my vision. (Scary if I'm not at home, because I could never drive a car in that condition.) Mine don't cause that much pain either, just a little sinus pressure, kind of like a barometric pressure headache, and a little nausea. They must be hereditary since my mom use to get the same kind of migraines, which she described as "looking through cut glass".

    ..."After adjusting for risk factors for cardiovascular disease, transient ischemic attack or stroke in middle age or late life, we found that women who suffered from migraines with aura in middle age had an almost twofold increased risk of brain lesions in the cerebellum later in life," ... Ahh great - something more to worry about!!

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  4. And that my dear is exactly what your aura is.
    "Cut glass" is also very apt.

    XOXO
    Me

    ReplyDelete
  5. I have what they call "silent migraines" I dont always have the pain.. but I get the aura, the vertigo, the nausea and the sensitivity to light.

    sometimes I do have the pain.. but and I dont mean this ugly in any way.. ... Not like you!

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  6. At times Mom had those h/a's- But before she had her change, she always got the pain too.
    They told me when I had my total hysterectomy that my h/a's would go either way- That they would go away or they would get worse.
    Such luck I have... Grrr.

    Mom swore there was something wrong with her eyes until I was medically diagnosed at 22.
    Then she knew it was all migraine-

    That was 28 years ago- almost 29, and even then there was such an ignorance about migraines... And such a "stigma" too.
    There still is. From the young people who have never known pain, and from the older ones who do not read and comprehend that this IS a disease. (They were raised that these h/a's are all in the persons head). No pun intended.
    Most of the people in the middle ie: baby boomers, just want to know more, and are careful readers and listeners.
    Hopefully a few of them come to my page? hehehe

    My friend Nancy, while compassionate, did not know everything I went through. Of course there IS NO WAy anyone could unless they have them too.
    She is 10 years older than me, and we worked together at Wouters-
    One Friday night, they called the ambulance for her. I ran down there right away when I got the call... She had the aura, she felt so weak, she looked like hell, and could barely talk- She was sick to her stomach ettc etc etc.
    I offered that it sounded like migraine. When Officer Blue Eyes got there, he took her b/p and it was quite high- Then the rescue squad came.
    Jeff (her hubby) and Ryan the son, went to the hospital too.
    As it turned out, it was migraine, and not a stroke.
    She called me the next day, saying "I can't believe this is what you go through."
    It is.
    You have them. You know.

    AND, you are doomed to "GOOFY" as well!
    hehehe

    XOXO
    Me






    XOXO
    Me

    ReplyDelete
  7. At times Mom had those h/a's- But before she had her change, she always got the pain too.
    They told me when I had my total hysterectomy that my h/a's would go either way- That they would go away or they would get worse.
    Such luck I have... Grrr.

    Mom swore there was something wrong with her eyes until I was medically diagnosed at 22.
    Then she knew it was all migraine-

    That was 28 years ago- almost 29, and even then there was such an ignorance about migraines... And such a "stigma" too.
    There still is. From the young people who have never known pain, and from the older ones who do not read and comprehend that this IS a disease. (They were raised that these h/a's are all in the persons head). No pun intended.
    Most of the people in the middle ie: baby boomers, just want to know more, and are careful readers and listeners.
    Hopefully a few of them come to my page? hehehe

    My friend Nancy, while compassionate, did not know everything I went through. Of course there IS NO WAy anyone could unless they have them too.
    She is 10 years older than me, and we worked together at Wouters-
    One Friday night, they called the ambulance for her. I ran down there right away when I got the call... She had the aura, she felt so weak, she looked like hell, and could barely talk- She was sick to her stomach ettc etc etc.
    I offered that it sounded like migraine. When Officer Blue Eyes got there, he took her b/p and it was quite high- Then the rescue squad came.
    Jeff (her hubby) and Ryan the son, went to the hospital too.
    As it turned out, it was migraine, and not a stroke.
    She called me the next day, saying "I can't believe this is what you go through."
    It is.
    You have them. You know.

    AND, you are doomed to "GOOFY" as well!
    hehehe

    XOXO
    Me

    ReplyDelete
  8. Sadly, there are way too many doctors that are guilty of this ignorance too.
    I had one young doctor tell me that if a h/a lasted more than a few hours that it wasn't a migraine.
    (We had been at the hospital for one of Berta's surgeries and I wasn't feeling well). The little bastard.

    This was about 9 years ago, and I told him he was a wart on the medical profession to say something that ignorant. (He was too).
    When I related that to my own internist, he sort of scoffed- Guess it's who their professor was and what THEY believed.
    My internist's daughter has migraines like me- And I believe that little fact within his own life taught his much more than any book or professor ever could have...

    XOXO
    Me

    ReplyDelete
  9. It's too late your already goofy ; ) but thanks for the blog and info . my mother and first wife had these too

    ReplyDelete
  10. You're welcome!

    Now get back in the corner...
    hehehe

    XOXO
    Me

    ReplyDelete
  11. hi, I hope you do not mind me popping into your page via scootch : )
    this is a very interesting blog
    I get "silent" migraines without the head pains
    take care xx

    ReplyDelete
  12. Sorry Sweet Eeveefoo;
    I missed replying to your comment here-

    My own mother had the silent ones- but only after her menopause. Before that she suffered like the rest of us, and for days at a time too.
    I don't know how the women back then got past thew idiotic stigmas attached to having a headache.
    How awful hard it must have been for them to cope! And especially the men who got them.
    (She was born in 1916- try and get that generation to talk about female crap)! hehehe

    XOXO
    Me

    ReplyDelete