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Medication overuse headache

Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports, 2009
The term medication overuse headache (MOH) was recently introduced by the International Headache Society to describe daily or nearly daily (chronic) headache that occurs after the regular intake (overuse) of any kind of antiheadache or antimigraine drug. Chronic headache is a growing problem throughout the world.
Zaza, Katsarava   +2 more
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Medication overuse headache

Current Opinion in Neurology, 2004
The current literature on medication overuse headache will be reviewed with regard to clinical presentation, pathophysiology, therapy and prognosis in the light of the new headache classification.Medication overuse headache is a widely unrecognized medical condition, which according to recent epidemiological studies has evolved to the third most ...
Volker, Limmroth, Zaza, Katsarava
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Medication Overuse Headache

Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain, 2012
Medication-overuse headache (MOH) is a chronic daily headache in which acute medications used at high frequency cause transformation to headache occurring 15 or more days per month for 4 or more hours per day if left untreated. MOH is a form of US Food and Drug Administration-defined chronic migraine. This review will describe (1) MOH clinical features
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[Medication-overuse headache].

MMW Fortschritte der Medizin, 2006
Headache associated with the chronic use of medications has become a significant problem in the management of headache. Typically, patients overusing analgesics suffer from tension headache, whereas those over-using triptans may experience daily migraine-type headaches or an increase in the frequency of migraine attacks. The treatment of choice in such
Kasja, Rabe, Zaza, Katsarava
  +8 more sources

Medication Overuse Headaches

Medical Clinics of North America, 2013
“An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure” in the management of MOH. Prevention of transformation of primary headache types to their chronic counterparts is necessary to prevent this most troubling transformation. Strict attention to what patients are telling you (and often times not telling you) about their episodic headaches will enable ...
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Medication-overuse headache

Practical Neurology, 2019
Medication-overuse headache is defined as headache occurring on more than 15days in a month in people with pre-existing primary headache, and developing as a consequence of regular overuse of acute headache treatments. Medication-overuse headache is common in general neurology clinics and can be difficult to manage.
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Medication Overuse Headache

Journal of Pain & Palliative Care Pharmacotherapy, 2016
Questions from patients about pain conditions and analgesic pharmacotherapy and responses from authors are presented to help educate patients and make them more effective self-advocates. In reply to a question about medication overuse headache, its presentation, causes, treatment, and prevention will be discussed.
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Rebound-withdrawal headache (medication overuse headache)

Current Treatment Options in Neurology, 2006
Rebound-withdrawal headache (medication overuse headache) is a problem that affects 1% of the population or perhaps more. Work from many countries has shown this to be a worldwide problem. It appears that the rebound-withdrawal headache often occurs on the background of pre-existing migraine or tension headache and may assume the phenotype of chronic ...
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Medication overuse headache

2008
Abstract This chapter covers the clinical features, treatment, and prognosis of medication overuse headache.
David Kernick, Peter J. Goadsby
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[Medication-overuse headache].

Orvosi hetilap, 2015
Medication-overuse headache affects 1 to 2 percent of the population. Any kind of painkiller, if taken regularly at least 10 days per month can cause medication-overuse headache, and therefore the possibility of this headache has to be raised whenever a patient with a preexistent headache notices a significant increase in headache frequency during a ...
Máté, Magyar   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

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