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Migraine Blue - The Goal Is To Be Free of Migraine

 
Migraineblue is my life now.My goal is to be migraine free.To be be able to be outside and look up at the sky the way I used to,with joy,not fear. To be free to live.

Migraine Blue - June 2009

this is your brain on migraine
Migraines with aura in middle age associated with late-life brain lesions
23. June 2009 19:33

Women who suffer from migraine headaches in middle age accompanied by neurological aura (visual disturbances, dizziness or numbness that can precede migraines) are more likely to have damage to brain tissue in the cerebellum later in life, according to a study by researchers at the National Institute on Aging (NIA) of the National Institutes of Health, the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences and the Icelandic Heart Association in Reykjavik.
Researchers noted that many people have these types of "silent" brain lesions, but their effect on physical and cognitive function in older people is not well studied.

The study appears in the June 24, 2009, issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. The researchers found that women are more susceptible than men to localized brain tissue damage identified on magnetic resonance images (MRI) and that women who reported having migraines with aura were almost twice as likely to have such damage in the cerebellum as women who reported not having headaches.

Researchers noted that while the study shows an association in women between migraine and cerebellar tissue damage later in life, the functional significance of such brain changes remains an open question. The cerebellum is located in the lower back side of the brain and is involved in functions such as motor activity, balance and cognition.

"This long-term population-based study increases interest in determining whether migraine could be a risk factor for brain lesions with clinical consequences over time," said NIA Director Richard J. Hodes, M.D. "Further research should help us better understand what these changes may mean for individuals and for brain function with age."

Migraine headaches affect approximately 11 percent of adults and 5 percent of children worldwide and are more common in women than in men. Migraines are often accompanied by extreme sensitivity to light and sound, nausea and vomiting. Some individuals with migraine also experience neurological aura symptoms, including temporary visual disturbances that can appear as flashing lights, zig-zag lines or loss of vision.

This study examined migraine headaches in a community-dwelling cohort of older people. Between 1972 and 1986, when participants were middle-aged (average age 50.9), they were asked about type and frequency of headaches. MRI scans of the cortex and cerebellum brain regions were conducted on 4,600 study participants between 2002 and 2006, when participants' average age was 76.2.

Participants were divided into four groups: migraine headache with aura once or more per month, migraine headache without aura, nonmigraine headache and no headache. The researchers found that overall, 17 percent of the women were classified as having migraine headaches, including 10.3 percent with migraine with aura. Only 5.7 percent of men were classified as having migraine.

Overall, MRI scans revealed the presence of any brain lesion in 39.3 percent of the men and 24.6 percent of the women. Prevalence of cerebellar lesions in women with migraine with aura was 23.0 percent vs. 14.5 percent for women not reporting headaches. There was no statistically significant difference in prevalence of these lesions in men (19.3 vs. 21.3 percent).

"After adjusting for risk factors for cardiovascular disease, transient ischemic attack or stroke in middle age or late life, we found that women who suffered from migraines with aura in middle age had an almost twofold increased risk of brain lesions in the cerebellum later in life," said Lenore Launer, Ph.D., senior author and chief of the neuroepidemiology section of the Laboratory of Epidemiology, Demography, and Biometry in the NIA's Intramural Research Program. "We are currently investigating the clinical implications of these brain lesions in this group of individuals. We are also interested in whether this association represents a cause and effect relationship or whether some other factors are responsible for the apparent association. The findings from this study are consistent with those from a previous study conducted in younger people using a similar protocol."

Participants were part of the Reykjavik Study and the Age Gene/Environment Susceptibility-Reykjavik Study (AGES-RS). Originally established to study heart disease in Iceland, the Reykjavik Study includes a random sample of men and women born between 1907 and 1935 and living in Reykjavik at the beginning of the study in 1967. In 2002, AGES-RS continued the Reykjavik Study to examine risk factors, genetic susceptibility and gene-environment interactions in relation to disease and disability in later life.

This study was funded by the National Institute on Aging, the Icelandic Heart Association and the Icelandic Parliament. Components of the study were also supported by the National Eye Institute, the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute and the Migraine Research Foundation.

news-medical.net

mymigraines.com

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Putting on a face for the world
We smile on the outside


We smile while we hurt. We do this for the sake of others. We don't want to worry them. We don't want to be a burden. While inside we are screaming with pain!
We don't want to upset them. We don't want to seem weak. We don't even want to think of having to go to the er and face the mistreatment there.
We're tired of the pain. We're tired of ourselves. There are times when we cannot take one more second of it. Some literally hit their heads against the wall, some rock and cry behind closed doors. Some scream and cry into their pillows.
There are times when it feels like death is near, there are times some just ask for it to be quick.
If only we could just melt away. Just be gone. Or sleep until there is no more pain.

But, as much as we can, for as long as we can, we smile for the sake of others.
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!
TUESDAY, Feb. 17 (HealthDay News) -- In a finding that speaks to the complicated connection between having migraines with aura and an increased risk of cardiovascular trouble, Harvard researchers report that a gene variant that was suspected to be a link between the conditions is not but that two genotypes could well be.

"Migraine with aura, in women in particular, is associated with about a doubling of the risk of stroke and heart attack," said Dr. Richard Lipton, director of the Montefiore Headache Center in New York City.
Research has shown a strong relationship between migraines and an increased risk for stroke, heart attack and cardiovascular disease, especially in women and especially in those also experiencing auras, or visual disturbances, right before their migraine.

Their theory is bolstered by the fact that both migraines and cardiovascular disease can be treated effectively with ACE inhibitors, drugs that inhibit the angiotensin-converting enzyme, which is critical to cardiovascular health
The research involved 25,000 white women who were part of the Women's Health Study, including 4,577 who had migraines currently or in the past. During about a dozen years of follow-up, 625 heart attacks or strokes were reported.

As it turned out, the researchers found no association between the ACE D/I variant and migraine, with or without aura. Nor was a linkage found between the variant and cardiovascular disease, ischemic stroke (involving restricted blood supply to the brain) or heart attack.

However, in an unexpected twist, women who reported migraine with aura and had the DD or DI genotype had a doubling of their risk for cardiovascular disease.

There appeared to be no heightened risk among those women with the II genotype, the study found.
source:medicine.net
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Ok, so here's my thoughts. I have chronic migraine, but I also get auras, and my pain level will rise.
I also have some not so good genetic factors. My mother had carotid artery disease, my oldest brother has it. One of my brothers had a stroke at the same age my fahter had his first stroke, 52.
With my brother that had the stroke, the doctors could only say it must be genetic. This brother doesn't smoke, drink, he exercises, eats right.
There are other issues in my family genes, but this concerns me alot as it is risk along with migraine. But any doctor doesn't seem to really take it seriously. I do have hashimoto's thyroiditis. I don't sit around and worry. I am as active as I can be considering my pain level.
I have been able to swim this past month about 4 to 5 times a week, 30-40 min at a time.
But the past few days have been very hard with the migraine pain level.
It drives me crazy that women are not taken as seriously as men where health issues, family history, symptoms are concerned.
With the results of studies in recent years, it certainly seems like women should be taken as seriously as men when it comes to health concerns!
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