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Mitochondrial Disorder and Migraine
1998The classification of migraine includes typical headache without aura of neuro-logic deficit (previously termed common migraine; International Headache Society [IHS] classification 1.1) and headache associated with aura of neurologic deficit (previously termed classical migraine; IHS classification 1.20).1 There are other subtypes of migraine ...
K. M. A. Welch, Charles Flippen
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Migraine Without Aura and Migraine with Aura are Inherited Disorders
Cephalalgia, 1996The familial occurrence and mode of inheritance were analysed in families with migraine without aura (MO) and migraine with aura (MA). The probands were found among 4000 persons from the general population. All persons with MA were included as probands, and an equivalent number of probands with MO was selected as a random sample among those with MO ...
Lennart Iselius, Jes Olesen, MB Russell
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Is migraine related to the eating disorders?
International Journal of Eating Disorders, 1993Migraine and the eating disorders, particularly bulimia nervosa, share some common demographics, phenomenology, psychopathology, and treatments. Bulimics also appear to be more sensitive to the induction of severe migrainous headaches than controls following challenge with the 5-HT agonist, m-chlorophenylpiperazine (m-CPP), but not placebo or L ...
Timothy D. Brewerton, Mark S. George
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Global epidemiology of migraine and its implications for public health and health policy
Nature Reviews Neurology, 2023T. Steiner, L. Stovner
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Migraine is not primarily a vascular disorder
Cephalalgia, 2012There is no question that significant vascular changes may occur during a migraine attack. The question is whether these vascular phenomena are a cause or a consequence of migraine pathophysiology and migraine symptoms. While the simplistic appeal of the ‘vascular hypothesis’ of migraine has had remarkable staying power, studies of the clinical ...
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Vestibular disorders in patients with migraine
European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology, 1997Vestibular symptoms frequently occur in patients with migraine headache. The common migraine is defined in neurology as a unilateral, pulsating headache, which may be associated with nausea and vomiting, and lasts one or several days. In the classic form patients have visual prodromal symptoms. Focal neurological signs in the migraine complique include,
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Migraine and Depersonalization Disorder
Cephalalgia, 2004Kieran C. Murphy, CM Cahill
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Migraine and the eating disorders
Psychiatry Research, 1993Mark S. George+2 more
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Migraine in mitochondrial disorders: Prevalence and characteristics
Cephalalgia, 2018C. Vollono+4 more
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