What is Chronic Migraine?
What is chronic migraine? The International Headache Society’s International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd edition, has defined chronic migraine as 15 or more headache days a month that has lasted for three months or more, and that on eight or more days a month has the features of a migraine headache.
What Causes Chronic Migraine?
Why some people get chronic migraine and some people don’t is not always entirely clear. There is some evidence that chronic migraine may be on a spectrum of headache frequency between episodic migraine (less than 15 days a month) and transformed migraine, which is migraine occurring very frequently, similar to chronic daily headache, but with clear migraine features to the headaches. Research into why headaches become chronic has shown the following risk factors for headache chronicization. This research did not focus on chronic migraine specifically, but looked at chronic daily headache.
Risk factors for chronic migrane are:
- History of head or neck trauma
- Female
- Habitual snoring
- Sleep apnea and other sleep disorders
- Obesity
- High caffeine intake
- Smoking
- Coexisting pain disorders
- Overuse of pain medications
- Major life changes (moving, getting married, etc.) were associated with the onset of chronic headache
Recent Comments