Cognitive impairment in chronic migraine compared to pseudotumor cerebri.

IF 2.9 4区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Olga P Fermo, Yifan Zhang, Jiangxia Wang, Abhay R Moghekar
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: We aimed to define the prevalence of objective cognitive impairment in a group of chronic migraineurs, and to define how migraineurs with cognitive impairment differed from those without impairment, and in doing so to compare cognitive impairment in chronic migraine to another chronic headache-related disorder already associated with cognitive impairment (i.e. pseudotumor cerebri syndrome).

Objectives: Cognitive impairment in migraine, especially chronic migraine, has been too little studied. Only a few studies have been done, demonstrating that cognitive impairment exists in chronic migraineurs. It is not known how this compares to other headache-related conditions.

Material and methods: We administered a cognitive battery consisting of the National Adult Reading Test, Mini-Mental Status Examination, Digit Span, Boston Naming Test, Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test, Trail Making Test, Controlled Oral Word Association, and Category Fluency. Cognitive impairment was defined as mild single-domain with one test score, and mild multi- -domain with two scores more than two standard deviations below the mean for age-, gender-, and education-adjusted norms. The data from this study was compared to our previously published population of patients with pseudotumor cerebri syndrome.

Results: One hundred prospectively recruited patients with chronic migraine were enrolled. Fifty-seven patients had normal cognitive profiles. Forty-three patients demonstrated mild cognitive impairment, and more than half (n = 24) showed impairment in multiple cognitive domains. Migraineurs with multi-domain impairment had higher pain intensity, shorter duration of disease, were taking narcotics, had more impaired vision-related mental health scores, and worse social health scores. We found an association between objective cognitive impairment and subjective perception of impairment only when controlling for pain. We found no associations with depression and topiramate use. The mean composite cognitive Z score was no different in chronic migraineurs and patients with pseudotumor cerebri.

Conclusions and clinical implications: Most chronic migraineurs have normal cognitive profiles, but a large proportion of them do experience mild cognitive impairment, especially in multiple domains. The impairment seen in migraine is similar to that in pseudotumor cerebri syndrome, which has already been associated with mild cognitive impairment. Cognitively impaired migraineurs are different from non-impaired/less impaired migraineurs in several ways, which may be an important factor in influencing their migraine treatment.

慢性偏头痛与脑假性肿瘤的认知损害比较。
前言:我们的目的是确定一组慢性偏头痛患者中客观认知障碍的患病率,并确定有认知障碍的偏头痛患者与无认知障碍的偏头痛患者有何不同,并以此将慢性偏头痛患者的认知障碍与另一种已经与认知障碍相关的慢性头痛相关疾病(即脑假性肿瘤综合征)进行比较。目的:偏头痛,特别是慢性偏头痛的认知障碍研究太少。只有少数研究表明慢性偏头痛患者存在认知障碍。目前尚不清楚这与其他头痛相关疾病相比如何。材料和方法:我们进行了认知测试,包括全国成人阅读测试、迷你精神状态测试、数字广度、波士顿命名测试、雷伊听觉语言学习测试、轨迹制作测试、控制口语单词联想和类别流畅性。认知障碍被定义为轻度单一领域,只有一个测试分数,轻度多领域,两个分数低于年龄、性别和教育水平调整后的平均值两个标准差以上。本研究的数据与我们之前发表的假性脑肿瘤综合征患者人群进行了比较。结果:100名慢性偏头痛患者被纳入研究。57名患者的认知特征正常。43例患者表现为轻度认知障碍,超过一半(n = 24)表现为多个认知领域的障碍。伴有多脑域损伤的偏头痛患者疼痛强度较高,病程较短,服用麻醉品,视力相关心理健康评分较高,社会健康评分较差。我们发现,只有在控制疼痛时,客观认知障碍和主观认知障碍之间才存在关联。我们没有发现抑郁和托吡酯的使用相关。慢性偏头痛患者和假性脑肿瘤患者的平均复合认知Z评分无显著差异。结论和临床意义:大多数慢性偏头痛患者的认知功能正常,但其中很大一部分患者存在轻度认知障碍,特别是在多个领域。在偏头痛中看到的损害与假性脑瘤综合征相似,后者已经与轻度认知障碍有关。认知受损的偏头痛患者与未受损/轻度受损的偏头痛患者在几个方面不同,这可能是影响其偏头痛治疗的重要因素。
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来源期刊
Neurologia i neurochirurgia polska
Neurologia i neurochirurgia polska 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
27.60%
发文量
128
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Polish Journal of Neurology and Neurosurgery is an official journal of the Polish Society of Neurology and the Polish Society of Neurosurgeons, aimed at publishing high quality articles within the field of clinical neurology and neurosurgery, as well as related subspecialties. For more than a century, the journal has been providing its authors and readers with the opportunity to report, discuss, and share the issues important for every-day practice and research advances in the fields related to neurology and neurosurgery.
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