Conference Coverage

DIY nerve stimulation effective in episodic migraine


 

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Both moderators of the headache poster tour that featured this study – Justin C. McArthur, MBBS, from Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and Steven Galetta, MD, from NYU Grossman School of Medicine – praised the presentation.

Dr. Galetta questioned whether patients were receiving preventive therapies. Dr. Kuruvilla said that the patients were allowed to enter the trial while taking preventive therapies, including antiepileptic treatments, blood pressure medications, and antidepressants, but that they had to be receiving stable doses.

The investigators didn’t distinguish between participants who were taking preventive therapies and those who weren’t, she said. “The aim was really to look at acute treatment for migraine,” and patients taking such medication “had been stable on their regimen for a pretty prolonged period of time.”

Dr. McArthur asked about the origin of the nausea some patients experienced.

It was difficult to determine whether the nausea was an aspect of an individual patient’s migraine attack or was an effect of the stimulation, said Dr. Kuruvilla. She noted that some patients found the vibrating sensation from the device uncomfortable and that nausea could be associated with pain at the site.

The device costs $300 to $400 (U.S.) and is available over the counter.

Dr. Kuruvilla is a consultant for Cefaly, Neurolief, Theranica, Now What Media, and Kx Advisors. She is on the speakers bureau for AbbVie/Allergan, Amgen/Novartis, Lilly, the American Headache Society, Biohaven, and CME meeting, and she is on an advisory board at AbbVie/Allergan, Lilly, Theranica, and Amgen/Novartis. She is editor and associate editor of Healthline and is an author for WebMD/Medscape, Healthline.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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