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Is there any treatment?
There are two ways to approach the treatment of migraine headache with drugs: prevent the attacks, or relieve the symptoms
during the attacks. Many people with migraine use both approaches by taking medications originally developed for epilepsy
and depression to prevent future attacks, and treating attacks when they happen with drugs called triptans that relieve pain
and restore function. Hormone therapy may help some women whose migraines seem to be linked to their menstrual cycle. Stress
management strategies, such as exercise, relaxation, biofeedback, and other therapies designed to help limit discomfort, may
also reduce the occurrence and severity of migraine attacks.
What is the prognosis?
Taking a combination of drugs to prevent and treat migraine attacks when they happen helps most people with migraine to limit
the disabling effects of these headaches. Women whose migraine attacks occur in association with their menstrual cycle are
likely to have fewer attacks and milder symptoms after menopause.
What research is being done?
Researchers believe that migraine is the result of fundamental neurological abnormalities caused by genetic mutations at work
in the brain. Investigations of the more rare, familial subtypes of migraine are yielding information about specific genes
and what they do, or don't do, to cause the pain of migraine headache. Understanding the cascade of biological events that
happen in the brain to cause a migraine, and the mechanisms that underlie these events, will give researchers opportunities
to develop and test drugs that could prevent or interrupt a migraine attack.