Aspirin could be the best remedy for migraine
April 14th, 2010 - 12:13 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Apr 14 (ANI): A 1000mg dose of aspirin can reduce the pain of a migraine headache within two hours, a ne study has found.
It also reduces any associated nausea, vomiting, and sensitivity to light or sound (photophobia or phonophobia), the study found.
Formulations of aspirin 900 mg together with 10 mg of the antiemetic metoclopramide are better than placebo at reducing symptoms of nausea and vomiting, according to the findings of a Cochrane Systematic Review using data from 13 studies with 4,222 participants.
The common symptom, whatever type of migraine someone has, is a severe headache, typically once or twice a month, lasting between four and 72 hours.
The headache is often pounding, on one side of the head, frequently with nausea, and sometimes with vomiting. Given the numbers of people affected, and the extent of the pain caused, migraine has considerable social and economic impact.
In the review published this week, Cochrane Researchers compared the differences in response rates for people taking aspirin alone or aspirin plus an antiemetic with those of people taking placebo or another active agent.
Researchers found that severe or moderate migraine headache pain can be reduced from moderate or severe to no pain in 25 percent of people (one in four) within two hours by taking a single dose of 900-1000 mg aspirin alone compared to placebo, with pain reduced to no worse than mild pain in 52 percent (one in two). While aspirin alone reduced some of the associated symptoms of nausea, vomiting, photophobia and phonophobia, aspirin plus metoclopramide was particularly good a reducing nausea and vomiting, though it produced no greater frequency of pain relief.
Researchers also found that a combination of aspirin and metoclopramide had a similar effect to 50 mg of the headache treatment sumatriptan (a serotonin agonist), but that a 100 mg dose of sumatriptan was slightly better at delivering a pain free response within two hours of taking the medication.
In terms of adverse effects, short-term use of the different drugs produced mostly mild and transient adverse effects. These occurred more commonly when taking aspirin than when taking a placebo, and more commonly when taking 100 mg sumatriptan than when taking aspirin plus metoclopramide.
“Aspirin plus metoclopramide will be a reasonable therapy for acute migraine attacks, but for many it will be insufficiently effective,” said the study leader Andrew Moore, who works in Pain Relief and the Department of Anaesthetics at the John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK. (ANI)
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Tags: active agent, cochrane, free response, headache treatment, metoclopramide, mg aspirin, mg dose, migraine, migraine headache pain, mild pain, nausea and vomiting, nausea vomiting, phonophobia, photophobia, response rates, sensitivity to light, serotonin agonist, social and economic impact, sumatriptan, symptoms of nausea