News

Video Report: Adult Migraine, Childhood Abuse?


 

FROM THE AMERICAN HEADACHE SOCIETY'S ANNUAL SCIENTIFIC MEETING

Childhood trauma may help drive physical changes in the way the human body later responds to stress, including chronic migraine in adulthood. Three physicians discuss the numbers, the potential pathophysiology, and the approach physicians should take when treating adult headache patients who may be survivors of childhood abuse.

Recommended Reading

New Data Alter Natalizumab Safety Considerations in MS
MDedge Psychiatry
Study Finds Nutritional Problems Common in Parkinson's
MDedge Psychiatry
Tool May Differentiate Vegetative From Minimally-Conscious States
MDedge Psychiatry
Neurology Trails Other Specialties in Practice-Based Research
MDedge Psychiatry
No Link Found Between Hippocampal Volume and Depression
MDedge Psychiatry
Cardiovascular Effects of Fingolimod Are Mostly Transient
MDedge Psychiatry
Newer Antiepileptics Appear Safe in First Trimester
MDedge Psychiatry
Editorial: Biological Differences Underlie Ability to Act on Creative Ideas
MDedge Psychiatry
Bacterial Meningitis Incidence Plummeted 30% During 1998-2007
MDedge Psychiatry
Scans Detect Brain Damage in "Mild" Blast-Related TBI
MDedge Psychiatry