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Chronic migraine headaches 1.4 X more likely with low vitamin D – July 2018

Effect of Vitamin D Deficiency on the Frequency of Headaches in Migraine.

J Clin Neurol. 2018 Jul;14(3):366-373. doi: 10.3988/jcn.2018.14.3.366.
Song TJ1, Chu MK2, Sohn JH3, Ahn HY4, Lee SH5, Cho SJ6.

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Pages listed in BOTH the categories Headache and Magnesium


Compared blood levels of 25 people with migraines to 25 people without GreenMedInfo 2015

Metal MigraineNo Migraine Ratio
Cadmium 0.36 ug0.09 ug 4X MORE if decrease
Iron0.97 ug0.48 ug2X MORE if decrease
Lead1.48 ug0.78 ug 2X MORE if decrease
Magnesium10.6 ug34.5 ug 3.5X LESS if increase
Zinc0.24 ug 5.77 ug 24X LESS if increase

Pages listed in BOTH the categories Headache and Zinc

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BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:
The risk of vitamin D deficiency varies with the season. The frequency of vitamin D deficiency in migraine patients and its association with migraine are unclear.

METHODS:
We retrospectively evaluated first-visit migraine patients between January 2016 and May 2017, and investigated the demographics, season, migraine subtypes, frequency, severity, and impact of migraine, psychological and sleep variables, climate factors, and vitamin D levels. The nonfasting serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration was measured to determine the vitamin D level, with deficiency of vitamin D defined as a concentration of <20 ng/mL.

RESULTS:
In total, 157 patients with migraine aged 37.0±8.6 years (mean±standard deviation) were analyzed. Their serum level of vitamin D was 15.9±7.4 ng/mL. Vitamin D deficiency was present in 77.1% of the patients, and occurred more frequently in spring and winter than in summer and autumn (89.1%, 85.7%, 72.4%, and 61.7%, respectively; p=0.008). In multivariate Poisson regression analysis, monthly headache was 1.203 times (95% confidence interval=1.046-1.383, p=0.009) more frequent in patients with vitamin D deficiency than in those without deficiency after adjusting for demographics, season, migraine subtype, depression, anxiety, and sleep quality. These associations were consistently noted in subgroup analysis of episodic migraine (odds ratio=1.266, p=0.033) and chronic migraine (odds ratio=1.390, p=0.041).

CONCLUSIONS:
Our study found that a larger number of monthly days with headache was related to vitamin D deficiency among migraineurs. Future studies should attempt to confirm the causal relationship between vitamin D deficiency and migraine.


Created by admin. Last Modification: Friday October 5, 2018 22:35:49 GMT-0000 by admin. (Version 6)

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10644 Frequency of Headaches in Migraine.pdf admin 05 Oct, 2018 681.01 Kb 559