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Vestibular migraine

Cephalalgia, 2014
Background The combination of vertigo, dizziness and balance disturbance with migraine is called vestibular migraine. Although it is estimated that up to 1% of the population suffers from this disease, it is still widely unknown and often underdiagnosed.
Stolte, Benjamin   +4 more
  +7 more sources

Vestibular Migraine

Physician Assistant Clinics, 2018
This chapter discusses Neuhauser, Leopold, von Brevern, Arnold, and Lempert’s 2001 paper on vestibular migraine including the design of the study (outcome measures, results, conclusions, and a critique).
Louisa Murdin, Linda M. Luxon
  +5 more sources

Vestibular Migraine

Neurologic Clinics, 2009
Vestibular migraine (VM) designates recurrent attacks of vertigo that are caused by migraine. VM presents with attacks of spontaneous or positional vertigo, lasting seconds to days, accompanied by migrainous symptoms. Because headache is often absent during acute attacks, other migrainous features have to be identified by thorough history taking.
Hannelore, Neuhauser, Thomas, Lempert
openaire   +2 more sources

Recognizing vestibular migraine

JAAPA, 2022
ABSTRACT Vestibular migraine is a recently defined disorder that is underrecognized by clinicians across specialties. Acute attacks cause symptoms of migraine headaches as well as vestibular symptoms such as dizziness or vertigo. Further research is needed to determine the pathophysiology of vestibular migraine.
openaire   +2 more sources

Vestibular migraine

2010
Vestibular migraine is a chameleon among the episodic vertigo syndromes because considerable variation characterizes its clinical manifestation. The attacks may last from seconds to days. About one-third of patients presents with monosymptomatic attacks of vertigo or dizziness without headache or other migrainous symptoms.
Strupp M., Versino M., Brandt T.
openaire   +2 more sources

Vestibular migraine

Current Pain and Headache Reports, 2004
Vestibular symptoms such as vertigo and dizziness are quite common in migraine. There is no specific category in the new International Headache Society Classification for vestibular migraine. However, given the symptomatology often described, it would fit best under basilar-type migraine, even though by definition monosymptomatic attacks with ...
openaire   +2 more sources

[Vestibular migraine].

Ugeskrift for laeger, 2017
Dizziness caused by migraine, vestibular migraine (VM), has been highly debated over the last three decades. The co-morbidity of migraine and dizziness is higher than a random concurrence. One third of the patients with migraine and dizziness have VM.
Lars Juul, Hansen   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Imaging of Migraine and Vestibular Migraine

2014
In the past few years, the application of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques to study patients with migraine has changed our view of migraine from primarily a vascular disorder to a neurovascular disease and currently to a central nervous system (CNS) disorder.
Messina R., Rocca M. A., Filippi M.
openaire   +2 more sources

Vestibular Migraine

2023
Michael Strupp   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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