Abstract
ABSTRACT: OBJECTIVE.: To study the prevalence and clinical characteristics of migraine in epileptic patients and to compare these epidemiological and clinical data with those in general population BACKGROUND: Systematic investigation of the characteristics of seizure-associated headaches is rare. Although data on the prevalence and characteristics of migraine in general population are numerous, few studies have investigated the relation between migraine and epilepsy METHODS: One hundred seventy two epileptic patients (98 female and 74 male) participated in a semi-standardized interview and study about headaches particularly migraine type. RESULTS: Seventy four out of the 172 epileptic patients had headache of one type or another (57%), migraine occurred in 34 patients (19.7%),female migraineurs (24 cases) and male (10 cases) (female/male ratio 2.4:1). Migraine occurred in isolation in 18 cases and was mixed with other headache types in 16 cases. Migraine cases without aura constituted 67.7% (23 cases), and with aura 31.3% (11 cases). In non-aura cases female (18 cases) outnumbered male (5 cases), unlike in aura cases (6 female vs 5 male cases) CONCLUSION : Migraine is much more prevalent in epileptics (19.7%)than in general population (11-12%). Other wise migraine in epileptics has similar clinical characteristics to migraine in general population including clinical varieties and gender distribution
Recommended Citation
sheet, Louay hashim and ridha, Mohammad tawfik
(2006)
"Migraine in epileptic Patients Epidemiology and Clinical Characteristics:,"
Iraqi Postgraduate Medical Journal: Vol. 5:
Iss.
1, Article 5.
Available at:
https://www.ipmj.org/journal/vol5/iss1/5