Image-Guided
Treatment Shown
to Break the Migraine Cycle
88 Percent of Patients Report Less Pain
to Break the Migraine Cycle
88 Percent of Patients Report Less Pain
Society
of Interventional Radiology --ATLANTA—March 1, 2015 -- An innovative
interventional radiology treatment has been found to offer chronic migraine
sufferers sustained relief of their headaches, according to research being
presented at the Society of Interventional Radiology’s Annual Scientific
Meeting. Clinicians at Albany Medical Center
and the State University New York Empire State College in Saratoga Springs used a treatment called
image-guided, intranasal sphenopalatine ganglion (SPG) blocks to give patients
enough ongoing relief that they required less medication to relieve migraine
pain.
“Migraine
headaches are one of the most common, debilitating diseases in the Unites States ,
and the cost and side effects of medicine to address migraines can be
overwhelming,” said Kenneth Mandato, M.D., the study’s lead researcher and an
interventional radiologist at Albany
Medical Center .
“Intranasal sphenopalatine ganglion blocks are image-guide, targeted,
breakthrough treatments. They offer a patient-centered therapy that has the
potential to break the migraine cycle and quickly improve patients’ quality
of life,” he added.
Mandato
and his team conducted a retrospective analysis of 112 patients suffering
migraine or cluster headaches. Patients reported the severity of their
headaches on a visual analogue scale (VAS), ranging from 1–10, to quantify the
degree of debilitation experienced from the migraine. During the treatment,
which is minimally invasive and does not involve needles touching the patient,
researchers inserted a spaghetti-sized catheter through the nasal passages and
administered 4 percent lidocaine to the sphenopalatine ganglion, a nerve bundle
just behind the nose associated with migraines.
Before
treatment, patients reported an average VAS score of 8.25, with scores greater
than 4 at least 15 days per month. The day after the SPG block patients’ VAS
scores were cut in half, to an average of 4.10. Thirty days after the
procedure, patients reported an average score of 5.25, a 36 percent decrease
from pretreatment. Additionally, 88 percent of patients indicated that they
required less or no migraine medication for ongoing relief.
“Administration of lidocaine to the sphenopalatine ganglion
acts as a ‘reset button’ for the brain’s migraine circuitry,” noted Mandato.
“When the initial numbing of the lidocaine wears off, the migraine trigger
seems to no longer have the maximum effect that it once did. Some patients have
reported immediate relief and are making fewer trips to the hospital for
emergency headache medicine,” he said. Because of the minimally invasive nature
of the treatment and the medication’s safety profile, Mandato believes patients
can have the SPG block repeated, if needed.
While patients
reported relief from their migraines, Mandato added that SPG blocks are not a
cure for migraines; they are a temporary solution as are other current
treatment options for chronic headaches. Because of the minimally invasive
nature of the treatment and the medication’s safety profile, Mandato believes
patients can have the SPG block repeated, if needed.
To further study
SPG blocks, Mandato will track how the 112 patients have responded six months
after treatment. He is also considering conducting a double-blind, prospective
study to more rigorously evaluate the effectiveness of SPG blocks in treating
chronic migraines.
Abstract 77: “Image-guided sphenopalatine ganglion
blocks: An IR solution for chronic headaches,” K. Mandato, G. Siskin, R.
Tartaglione, G. Bolotin, C. Stavrakis, M. Englander, L. Keating, A. Herr,
Radiology, Albany Medical Center, N.Y.; D. Geer, SUNY Empire State College,
Saratoga Springs, N.Y.; SIR Annual Scientific Meeting, Feb. 28–March 5. This
abstract can be found at www.sirmeeting.org.
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