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Nerve Stimulator May Provide Effective Drug-Free Migraine Treatment

Main Category: Headache / Migraine
Also Included In: Neurology / Neuroscience | Medical Devices / Diagnostics
Article Date: 11 Feb 2013

A nerve stimulator could be a promising new form of treatment for migraine sufferers, suggests a recent study published in in the journal Neurology. Results from a clinical study of Cefaly(R) appear to indicate that electrical stimulation of the supraorbital nerve using a stimulator device placed on the forehead is extremely effective at helping prevent the onset of a migraine.

Migraines are characterized as being a form of moderate to severe recurrent headaches - lasting for hours or even days - that cause excessive throbbing pain, nausea and extreme sensitivity to light. The World Health Organization estimates that around 10% of adults worldwide suffer from migraine.

A group of researchers from Belgium identified the therapeutic properties of using an electrical stimulator for 20 minutes a day. The study included 67 participants who suffered from migraine an average of four times a month.

The investigators monitored them for one month without any form of treatment. They then treated the patients with either 20 minutes of electrical stimulation per day or sham stimulation (electrical stimulation too low to have an effect) for three months.

Cefaly
When placed on the forehead, Cefaly provides electrical stimulation of the supraorbital nerve.
Photo from cefaly.ca.
After receiving daily electrical stimulation for at least 20 months, patients suffered from fewer days with migraine than when they received no treatment (4.9 days a month versus 6.9 days). Those who received the same treatment saw no difference in the number of days they suffered from migraine.

None of the patients experienced any negative side effects from using the nerve stimulator.

Promising future for migraine treatment

Lead author of the study, Jean Schoenen, MD, PhD, of Liège University in Belgium, said, "These results are exciting, because the results were similar to those of drugs that are used to prevent migraine, but often those drugs have many side effects for people, and frequently the side effects are bad enough that people decide to quit taking the drug,"

Dr. Gretchen Tietjen, chair of neurology at the University of Toledo Medical Center in Ohio, commented, "It's certainly true that for some people side effects are really problematic. Depending on the class of medication, there can be problems with weight gain, hair loss, thinking, sedation, dry mouth, fatigue, dizziness, light-headedness and, for men, particular sexual side effects."

Cefaly has a price of close to $400 and is currently available in Belgium, France and Canada. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is still in the process of making an approval decision.

A demonstration of Cefaly in action

Effective migraine treatment appears to be within reach

A previous study published in identified and revealed the therapeutic benefits of using magnetic stimulation as a very promising non-drug treatment option for migraine.

In addition, an article published in Medical News Today in September 2012 suggested that a hand-held, non-invasive single pulse Spring Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) device, made by eNeura Technology in California, may provide effective treatment for migraine.

Written by Joseph Nordqvist
Copyright: MediLexicon International Ltd

Original article posted on Medical News Today.
Articles not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today

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