1 / 25

MANAGEMENT OF FIBROMYALGIC SYNDROME

MANAGEMENT OF FIBROMYALGIC SYNDROME. Prof. A.V. SRINIVASAN Emeritus Professor – The Tamil Nadu Dr. MGR Medical University RAILWAY HOSPITAL. 30 th July 2010. Prevalence. Familial Young, healthy women; F>M: 3:1 17 – 18.2% of adult females 6 – 6.5% adult males

gerik
Télécharger la présentation

MANAGEMENT OF FIBROMYALGIC SYNDROME

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MANAGEMENT OF FIBROMYALGIC SYNDROME Prof. A.V. SRINIVASAN Emeritus Professor – The Tamil Nadu Dr. MGR Medical University RAILWAY HOSPITAL 30th July 2010

  2. Prevalence • Familial • Young, healthy women; F>M: 3:1 • 17 – 18.2% of adult females • 6 – 6.5% adult males • 2-3rd decade onset… can occur sooner • Peaks ages 22-55. • ½ migraine sufferers not diagnosed. • 94% pt’s seen in primary care settings for HA have migraines

  3. Common misdiagnoses for migraine: • Sinus HA • Stress HA • Referral to ENT for sinus disease and facial pain.

  4. Migraineurs more likely to have motion sickness. • Half of Meniere’s patients claim to have migrainous symptoms. • BPPV

  5. $13 billion/year in lost productivity • 1/3 participants in American Migraine Study II missed work in prior 3 months

  6. IHS Diagnostic criteria: migraine w/o aura HA lasting for 4-72 hrs HA w/2+ of following: Unilateral Pulsating Mod/severe intensity. Aggravated by routine physical activity. During HA at least 1 of following N/V Photophobia Phonophobia IHS criteria: Migraine/aura (3 out of 4) One or more fully reversible aura symptoms indicates focal cerebral cortical or brainstem dysfunction. At least one aura symptom develops gradually over more than 4 minutes. No aura symptom lasts more than one hour. HA follows aura w/free interval of less than one hour and may begin before or w/aura. Migraine Definition History, PE, Neuro exam show no other organic disease. At least five attacks occur

  7. Migraine Subtypes • Basilar type migraine • Dysarthria, vertigo, diplopia, tinnitus, decreased hearing, ataxia, bilateral paresthesias, altered consciousness. • Simultaneous bilateral visual symptoms. • No muscular weakness. • Retinal or ocular migraine • Repeated monocular scotomata or blindness < 1 hr • Associated with or followed by a HA

  8. Migraine Subtypes • Menstrual migraine • Hemiplegic migraine • Unilateral motor and sensory symptoms that may persist after the headache. • Complete recover • Familial hemiplegic migraine

  9. Migrainous vertigo • Vertigo – sole or prevailing symptom. • Benign paroxysmal vertigo of childhood. • Prevalence 7-9% of pts in referral dizzy and migraine clinics. • Not recognized by the IHS • Diagnosis (proposed criteria) • Recurrent episodic vestibular symptoms of at least moderate severity. • One of the following: • Current of previous history of IHS migraine. • Migrainous symptoms during two or more attacks of vertigo. • Migraine-precipitants before vertigo in more than 50% of attacks. • Response to migraine medications in more than 50% of attacks

  10. Migraine mechanism • Neurovascular theory. • Abnormal brainstem responses. • Trigemino-vascular system. • Calcitonin gene related peptide • Neurokinin A • Substance P • Extracranial arterial vasodilation. • Temporal • Pulsing pain. • Extracranial neurogenic inflammation. • Decreased inhibition of central pain transmission. • Endogenous opioids.

  11. Important role in migraine pathogenesis. • Mechanism of action in migraines not well established. • Main target of pharmacotherapy.

  12. Aura Mechanism • Cortical spreading depression • Self propagating wave of neuronal and glial depolarization across the cortex • Activates trigeminal afferents • Causes inflammation of pain sensitive meninges that generates HA through central/peripheral reflexes. • Alters blood-brain barrier. • Associated with a low flow state in the dural sinuses.

  13. Auras • Vision – most common neurologic symptom • Paresthesia of lips, lower face and fingers… 2nd most common • Typical aura • Flickering uncolored zigzag line in center and then periphery • Motor – hand and arm on one side • Auras (visual, sensory, aphasia) – 1 hr • Prodrome • Lasts hours to days…

  14. Clinical manifestations • Clinical manifestations • Lateralized in severe attacks – 60-70% • Bifrontal/global HA – 30% • Gradual onset with crescendo pattern. • Limits activity due to its intensity. • Worsened by rapid head motion, sneezing, straining, constant motion or exertion. • Focal facial pain, cutaneous allodynia, GI dysfunction, facial flushing, lacrimation, rhinorrhea, nasal congestion and vertigo…

  15. Precipitating factors • stress • head and neck infection • head trauma/surgery • aged cheese • dairy • red wine • nuts • shellfish • caffeine withdrawal • vasodilators • perfumes/strong odors • irregular diet/sleep • light

  16. Treatment • Abortive • Stepped • Stratified • Staged • Preventive

  17. Abortive Therapy • Reduces headache recurrence. • Alleviation of symptoms. • Analgesics • Tylenol, opioids… • Antiphlogistics • NSAIDs • Vasoconstrictors • Caffeine • Sympathomimetics • Serotoninergics • Selective - triptans • Nonselective – ergots • Metoclopramide

  18. Abortive care strategies • Stepped • Start with lower level drugs, then switch to more specific drugs if symptoms persist or worsen. • Analgesics – Tylenol, NSAIDs… • Vasoconstrictors – sympathomimetics… • Opioids (try to avoid) - Butorphanol • Triptans – sumatriptan (oral, SQ, nasal), naratriptan, rizatripatan, zomatriptan. • Limited by patient compliance. • Stratified • Adjusts treatment according to symptom intensity. • Mild – analgesics, NSAIDs • Moderate – analgesic plus caffeine/sympathomimetic • Severe – opioids, triptans, ergots… • Severe sx treatment limited due to concomitant GI sx’s. • Staged • Bases treatment on intensity and time of attacks. • HA diary reviewed with patient. • Medication plan and backup plans.

  19. Preventive therapy • Consider if pt has more than 3-4 episodes/month. • Reduces frequency by 40 – 60%. • Breakthrough headaches easier to abort. • Beta blockers • Amitriptyline • Calcium channel blockers • Lifestyle modification. • Biofeedback.

  20. Botox 51% migraineurs treated had complete prophylaxis for 4.1 months. 38% had prophylaxis for 2.7 months. Randomized trial showed significant improvement in headache frequency with multiple treatments.

  21. Conclusions • Migraine is common but unrecognized. • Keep migraine and its variants in the differential diagnosis.

  22. Dedicated to my family for making everything worthwhile

  23. READnot to contradict or confute Nor to Believe and Take for Granted butTO WEIGH AND CONSIDER THANK YOU

  24. References • Landy, S. Migraine throughout the Life Cycle: Treatment through the Ages. Neurology. 2004; 62 (5) Supplement 2: S2-S8. • Bailey, BJ. Head and Neck Surgery – Otolaryngology 3rd Edition. 2001. Pgs. 221-235. • Bajwa, ZH, Sabahat, A. Pathophysiology, Clinical Manifestations, and Diagnosis of Migraine in Adults. Up To Date online. 2005. • Lipton, RB, Stewart, WF, Liberman, JN. Self-awareness of migraine: Interpreting the labels that headache sufferers apply to their headaches. Neurology. 2002; 58(9) Supplement 6: S21-S26. • Cady, RK, Schreiber, CP. Sinus headache or migraine?: Considerations in making a differential diagnosis. Neurology. 2002; 58 (9) Supplement 6: S10-S14. • Perry, BF, Login, IS, Kountakis, SE. Nonrhinologic headache in a tertiary rhinology practice. Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surg 2004; 130: 449-452. • Daudia, AT, Jones, NS. Facial migraine in a rhinological setting. Clinical Otolaryngology and Allied Sciences. 2002; 27(6): 521-525. • Spierings, EL. Migraine mechanism and management. Otolarynogol Clin N Am 36 (2003): 1063 – 1078. • Avnon, y, Nitzan, M, Sprecher, E, Rogowski, Z, and Yarnitsky, D. Different patterns of parasympathetic activation in uni- and bilateral migraineurs. Brain. 2003; 126: 1660-1670. • Stroud, RH, Bailey, BJ, Quinn, FB. Headache and Facial Pain. Dr. Quinn’s Online Textbook of Otolaryngology Grand Rounds Archive. 2001. http://www.utmb.edu/otoref/Grnds/HA-facial-pain-2001-0131/HA-facial-pain-2001.doc • Ondo, WG, Vuong KD, Derman, HS. Botulinum toxin A for chronic daily headache: a randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel design study. Cephalalgia 2004 (24): 60-65.

More Related