Best Health and Fitness News

Read All the Best of the Web

Connection Between Migraine Headaches and Epilepsy

March 30th, 2009 · No Comments · Pain Management

As migraine headaches involves more and more people, researchers across the world are wrestling with hypotheses to help explain the fundamental responsible constituents. Today an estimated 30 million individuals in the USA are paralyzed by migraines. While migraines could take place at any age, surveys disclose that the disease usually strikes individuals between the age of 10 and 40. And more or less 75% of migraine sufferers nowadays are women.

Migraine pain is caused by inflamed blood vessels and nerves around the brain. Though considerable research has been done, the precise origin of migraines is still a mystery. Scientists believe that the condition may result from a series of reactions in the central nervous system due to shifts in the body or environment. Numerous reports also establish that individuals crippled with migraine troubles may have ancestral predisposition to triggers from their parents or grandparents. Research also indicates that people with a single parent possessing migraines have a 50% chance of developing migraines.

There are several possibilities about the causes of migraines. The blood flow hypothesis proposes that blood vessels narrow or expand. A narrowing of the blood vessels constricts blood flow, causing dizziness or problems with sight. On the other hand, when blood vessels broaden they push the nerves nearby and produce pain sensation. Even another hypothesis focuses on chemical changes in the brain where it is hinted that a gap in the messages directed from one cell to another to contract or expand blood vessels cause migraine. Recently, migraines have also been related to genes where surveys have shown that inheriting abnormal genes that master the functions of certain brain cells can result in migraines.

Broadly, migraines are categorised into 2 types – Classic Migraine and Common Migraine. In classic migraine, the person develops visual symptoms (also well-known as ‘aura’) approximately 10 to 30 minutes before an attack. In common migraine there is no aura, but there are other symptoms comparable to nausea and vomiting. Migraines likewise hit women during menstrual shifts, and are conceived to be hormone-related.

There is as well a connection between migraine and epileptic seizure disorders. The relation is highly obvious in migraine-triggered epilepsy. Migraines affect around 15% of the epileptic population.

Tags: ··

No Comments so far ↓

There are no comments yet...Kick things off by filling out the form below.

Leave a Comment