Abstract

The purpose of this study was to evaluate pain hypersensitivity in chronic migraine patients 3 months after undergoing onabotulinumtoxin-A therapy, physical therapy (PT), or the combination of the two. Pressure pain threshold (PPT) was assessed in accordance with Andersen's guidelines, focusing on five muscles in the trigeminocervical area (namely, trapezius, levator scapulae, temporalis, sub-occipitalis, and scalenus medius) and one muscle outside of the area, (i.e., tensor fasciae latae). Moreover, three headache parameters, namely, attack frequency, duration, and pain intensity, were recorded in an ad hoc diary kept by the patients. A total of 30 patients were included in three treatment groups: 1. onabotulinumtoxin-A therapy, 2. PT, and 3. a combination of onabotulinumtoxin-A and PT. The results show that, at the final assessment, the PPT was significantly reduced in the combined treatment group compared to the two single-therapy groups. As regards headache parameters, frequency and duration of the attacks were decreased significantly in all three treatment groups, whereas in pain intensity, the reduction was statistically significant in the combined treatment group and the onabotulinumtoxin-A therapy. Results suggest that a better pain modulation in patients with chronic migraine can be achieved with a combined treatment of onabotulinumtoxin-A and physical therapy. Indeed, the combination of both pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments results in the reduction of both headache-related parameters and widespread pressure hyperalgesia.

Highlights

  • Migraine is one of the most severe and burdensome types of headaches

  • Previous studies highlighted the importance of assessing the pressure pain threshold (PPT) as a clinical outcome of trigeminal system sensitization in patients with chronic migraine [8,9,10]

  • Our study investigated the effect of different treatments on PPT, namely, (a) onabotulinumtoxin-A (BoNT-A) only, (b) physical therapy (PT) (PT) only, and (c) onabotulinumtoxin-A and PT combined (BoNT-A+PT)

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Summary

Introduction

Migraine is one of the most severe and burdensome types of headaches. This multifaceted and fragmented burden of migraine is often related to a complex physiopathology. Several studies identify lower pressure pain threshold (PPT) in the trigeminocervical complex and throughout the body in patients with chronic migraine with respect to that identified in the same muscles in healthy controls [8,9,10,11]. These studies show lower PPT in female patients with respect to male patients, while no difference was observed between episodic and chronic forms, between migraine and tension-type headache, or between symptomatic and non-symptomatic sides. A conspicuous amount of literature has underlined the importance of a multidisciplinary approach, no earlier work has evaluated the PPT following combined treatments in this sense [8,9,10]

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