Migraine sufferers are twice as
likely to have a myocardial infarction as people without migraine
Migraine sufferers are twice as likely to have heart
attacks as people without migraine, according to a new study by researchers at
Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University. The study, published
in the February 10 online issue of Neurology, the medical journal of the American
Academy of Neurology, found that migraine sufferers also face increased risk for
stroke and were more likely to have key risk factors for cardiovascular disease,
including diabetes, high blood pressure and high cholesterol.
"Migraine has been viewed as a painful condition
that affects quality of life, but not as a threat to people's overall health,"
said lead investigator Richard B. Lipton, M.D., senior author of the study and
professor and vice chair in The Saul R. Korey Department of Neurology at Einstein.
He also directs the Headache Center at Montefiore Medical Center, the University
Hospital and Academic Medical Center for Einstein.
Dr. Lipton added, "Our study suggests that migraine
is not an isolated disorder and that, when caring for people with migraine, we
should also be attentive to detecting and treating their cardiovascular risk factors."
Previous population studies found that migraine with
aura is associated with heart disease and stroke, particularly in health care
professionals over the age of 45. The Einstein study showed that both migraine
with aura and migraine without aura are risk factors for heart disease and stroke
in a broadly representative sample of the U.S. population, including people from
all walks of life between the ages of 18 and 80.
In the study, the researchers analyzed data on 6,102
people with migraine and 5,243 people without migraine. Participants completed
questionnaires that asked about general health; headache frequency, severity and
symptoms; and a broad range of medically diagnosed cardiovascular symptoms and
events. Data was collected as part of The American Migraine Prevalence and Prevention
Study, a longitudinal, population-based study of U.S. headache sufferers.
Results showed that migraine sufferers were about twice
as likely to have had a heart attack compared with people without migraine (4.1
percent of people with migraine compared with 1.9 percent of those without migraine).
The heart-attack risk was higher for those whose migraine is accompanied by aura:
a three-fold greater risk compared with people who didn't suffer migraine.
The data also shows that people with migraine were about
50 percent more likely than controls to have diabetes, hypertension, and elevated
cholesterol, all well-known cardiovascular risk factors. The study found that
these risk factors may contribute - but do not fully explain - the increased risk
of heart attack and stroke in persons with migraine. This finding, according to
an editorial accompanying the study, suggests a possible mechanism linking migraine
headaches and cardiovascular events: the functioning of the inner layer of blood
vessels, known as the endothelium, might be compromised in vessels both inside
and outside the brains of migraine sufferers.
"Migraine sufferers should not be alarmed by our
findings," said Dr. Lipton. "While we found an increased risk for cardiovascular
problems, the percentage of people actually affected remains small. Overall, for
example, only 4.1 percent of migraine sufferers had heart attacks. And while the
risk of stroke was 60 percent higher for migraine sufferers than for the rest
of the population, the percentage of migraine sufferers experiencing strokes was
still quite low - 2 percent."
The main message of the study, said Dr. Lipton, is that
migraine patients and their doctors should be particularly attentive to identifying
and managing cardiovascular risk factors, such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol,
obesity, and diabetes.
"We hope these findings will motivate migraine sufferers
to exercise regularly, to avoid smoking and to address their other health problems,"
said Dawn Buse, Ph.D., assistant professor in The Saul R. Korey Department of
Neurology and co-author of the study. "It is important to view migraine as
more than a series of individual attacks. We need to think about migraine as a
chronic disorder with episodic attacks - and between those attacks, migraine sufferers
have an enduring predisposition to cardiovascular events. In that sense, migraine
has a lot in common with conditions like asthma, where sufferers seem fine between
attacks, but there is more going on beneath the surface."
In follow-up studies, Dr. Lipton and his colleagues aim
to assess the importance of headache frequency and severity, aura frequency, and
other factors influencing cardiovascular risk. They also hope to assess whether
effective migraine treatment reduces that risk.
The first author of the study is Marcelo E. Bigal, M.D.,
Ph.D., a scientist with Merck Research Laboratories and an associate clinical
professor in The Saul R. Korey Department of Neurology at Einstein. His co-authors
include Matthew S. Robbins, M.D., at Einstein; Tobias Kurth, M.D., Ph.D. at Harvard
Medical School; and Nancy Santanello, M.D. and Wendy Golden, M.S., at Merck, Inc.
The American Migraine Prevalence and Prevention Study
was funded through a research grant to the National Headache Foundation from Ortho-McNeil
Neurologics, Inc., Titusville, NJ. Additional data collection was supported by
Merck & Co.,
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