Abstract

Whether stroke in a patient with migraine and patent foramen ovale (PFO) is due to PFO or migraine is difficult to decide. In a 33-year-old woman with migraine with aura, a visual field defect developed acutely. Neurological investigation revealed double vision when looking to the left and exaggerated patella tendon reflexes. Since then the patient complained about permanent visual impairment. CT- and MRI-scans of the brain showed a right occipital ischemic stroke. Intensive search for risk factors revealed cigarette smoking and chronic hypovolemia. On transesophageal echocardiography an inter-atrial hypermobile septum and a PFO were detected. The patient underwent closure of the PFO by means of an Amplatzer PFO occluder nine weeks after the stroke. Since then she did not experience a further cerebrovascular event or migraine attack. This case shows that in a patient with PFO and migraine with aura, stroke may be attributable to migraine rather than to PFO. Occlusion of the PFO may reduce the frequency and intensity of migraine attacks.

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