Magnesium ion serum profile in chronic migraine: comparative study between treated and non-treated patients
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.48208/HeadacheMed.2012.4Keywords:
Chronic migraine, Serum magnesium, PathophysiologyAbstract
Chronic migraine is recognized as a migraine complication and is characterized by frequency of attacks up to 15 days/ month for more than three months, in absence of painkiller abusive usage. Studies indicate that magnesium ion plays a role in migraine pathophysiology but, until now, they have never included only patients with chronic migraine as their population. Objective: To compare serum magnesium levels etween treated and non-treated chronic migraineurs. Methods: Twenty-two patients with chronic migraine were selected and divided in two groups (treated and non-treated), matched by sex and age, and submitted to serum dosage of magnesium ion for latter comparison. Result: The non-treated chronic migraineurs presented serum magnesium ion level within normal limits, but lower than those found in the treated group with a statistically significant difference. Conclusion: Similarly to other studies in the literature, this study stresses the importance of magnesium ion in the migraine pathophysiology, but studying only the chronic migraine patients.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2012 Headache Medicine
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.