A recent study showed that migraine patients have a higher risk of stroke, MI, venous thrombosis, and atrial fibrillation within the first year of their initial diagnosis. The study suggests that not only doctors need to be alert to migraine, but also patients themselves. To have a sense of risk, active treatment should be started after diagnosis.
The study conducted a continuous 19-year study of more than 50,000 migraine patients and 500,000 non-migraine headache patients. The incidence of stroke in one year was 8 times higher in the control group than that in the control group in the first diagnosis of migraine. MI, venous thrombosis The incidence of atrial fibrillation and atrial fibrillation was twice that of the control group. In the following 18 years, the risk continued to exist, but it decreased compared to the first year, such as the risk of ischemic stroke was about 2 times, the risk of myocardial infarction Become 1.5 times.
Migraine is a common disease with a prevalence of about 15% in the general population and affecting nearly 1 billion people worldwide. The disease is classified as both threatened and non-preamble. The former accounts for about 10% of migraine patients, mostly in adolescence. Onset and family history, from hours to days before the onset of headache, may have burnout, prodrome such as lack of concentration and yawning. Before the headache or when the headache occurs, the vision often appears blurred, dark spots, flashes or objects Deformation, etc.. With prodromal symptoms, the patient may experience one or both frontal or frontal pulsatile headaches, often accompanied by nausea, vomiting, photophobia or sweating, and headaches last for 4 to 72 hours. No signs Migraine has no clear prodromal symptoms. It usually has a longer duration than a migraine attack, and the pain is lighter, but it will slowly increase. Clinically used therapeutic drugs include non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, blood circulation, and meridians. Analgesic Chinese medicine and so on.
Migraine has more mechanisms, such as endothelial dysfunction, hypercoagulability, platelet aggregation, vasospasm, heredity and sedentary activity. It is easy to see that many of these are the mechanisms of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases or risk factors. Therefore, migraine has a close relationship with cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases. Migraine patients will gradually become accustomed to recurrent attacks, take painkillers and eat painkillers, or take a sleep. This will not only result in less than good therapeutic effects. There are also potential health risks and it is recommended to receive regular treatment. In particular, women who are newly diagnosed within one year of migraine need special attention to cardiovascular and cerebrovascular risks. They should go to the hospital regularly for treatment and treatment.