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Is Medication Overuse Drug Specific or Not? Data from a Review of Published Literature and from an Original Study on Italian MOH Patients
by
Sansone, Emanuela
, Grazzi, Licia
, Raggi, Alberto
, D’Amico, Domenico
, Grignani, Eleonora
in
Adult
/ Analgesics, Non-Narcotic - adverse effects
/ Analgesics, Opioid - adverse effects
/ Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal - adverse effects
/ Aspirin - adverse effects
/ Caffeine
/ Disability Evaluation
/ Drug withdrawal
/ Female
/ Headache Disorders, Secondary - epidemiology
/ Humans
/ Indomethacin - adverse effects
/ Internal Medicine
/ Italy - epidemiology
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Middle Aged
/ Migraine
/ Migraine and Beyond (R Cowan
/ Migraine Disorders - epidemiology
/ Pain Medicine
/ Recurrence
/ Section Editor
/ Topical Collection on Migraine and Beyond
/ Tramadol - adverse effects
/ Tryptamines - adverse effects
2018
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Is Medication Overuse Drug Specific or Not? Data from a Review of Published Literature and from an Original Study on Italian MOH Patients
by
Sansone, Emanuela
, Grazzi, Licia
, Raggi, Alberto
, D’Amico, Domenico
, Grignani, Eleonora
in
Adult
/ Analgesics, Non-Narcotic - adverse effects
/ Analgesics, Opioid - adverse effects
/ Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal - adverse effects
/ Aspirin - adverse effects
/ Caffeine
/ Disability Evaluation
/ Drug withdrawal
/ Female
/ Headache Disorders, Secondary - epidemiology
/ Humans
/ Indomethacin - adverse effects
/ Internal Medicine
/ Italy - epidemiology
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Middle Aged
/ Migraine
/ Migraine and Beyond (R Cowan
/ Migraine Disorders - epidemiology
/ Pain Medicine
/ Recurrence
/ Section Editor
/ Topical Collection on Migraine and Beyond
/ Tramadol - adverse effects
/ Tryptamines - adverse effects
2018
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Is Medication Overuse Drug Specific or Not? Data from a Review of Published Literature and from an Original Study on Italian MOH Patients
by
Sansone, Emanuela
, Grazzi, Licia
, Raggi, Alberto
, D’Amico, Domenico
, Grignani, Eleonora
in
Adult
/ Analgesics, Non-Narcotic - adverse effects
/ Analgesics, Opioid - adverse effects
/ Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal - adverse effects
/ Aspirin - adverse effects
/ Caffeine
/ Disability Evaluation
/ Drug withdrawal
/ Female
/ Headache Disorders, Secondary - epidemiology
/ Humans
/ Indomethacin - adverse effects
/ Internal Medicine
/ Italy - epidemiology
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Middle Aged
/ Migraine
/ Migraine and Beyond (R Cowan
/ Migraine Disorders - epidemiology
/ Pain Medicine
/ Recurrence
/ Section Editor
/ Topical Collection on Migraine and Beyond
/ Tramadol - adverse effects
/ Tryptamines - adverse effects
2018
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Is Medication Overuse Drug Specific or Not? Data from a Review of Published Literature and from an Original Study on Italian MOH Patients
Journal Article
Is Medication Overuse Drug Specific or Not? Data from a Review of Published Literature and from an Original Study on Italian MOH Patients
2018
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Overview
Purpose of Review
The aim is twofold. First, to give an insight on the role exerted by different classes of drugs in favouring migraine chronification. Second, to explore the relationship between type and amount of overused medications and history of previous withdrawal treatment and of frequent relapses.
Recent Findings
All drug classes were found to favour migraine chronification. No data are available for the association with relapses into CM-MOH. Our clinical study shows that patients who underwent previous withdrawal treatments were more likely to be overusers of multiple drug classes and overuse higher amounts of symptomatic medications, particularly, indomethacin, eletriptan and tramadol. Frequent relapsers were more likely to be overusers of opioids or ergotamine and caffeine derivates or of multiple classes, particularly acetylsalicylic acid and ergotamine/caffeine derivates.
Summary
The joint results our review and clinical study do not seem to support the idea that MOH is drug-specific: rather, it points out that all drug classes may induce migraine chronification. Those drugs which are at higher risk of overuse are among those preferred by the “worst” patients, i.e. those who needed one or more withdrawal treatments for MOH. Our results reinforce the clinical impression that patients with CM and MOH, and particularly the most difficult to treat for their poor response to withdrawal treatments, are characterised by a particular drive towards the consumption of “whatever is likely to be perceived to provide some relief”, despite these drugs that are perceived as “more powerful”, are often indicated as second- or third-line medications.
Publisher
Springer US,Springer Nature B.V
Subject
/ Analgesics, Non-Narcotic - adverse effects
/ Analgesics, Opioid - adverse effects
/ Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal - adverse effects
/ Caffeine
/ Female
/ Headache Disorders, Secondary - epidemiology
/ Humans
/ Indomethacin - adverse effects
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Migraine
/ Migraine and Beyond (R Cowan
/ Migraine Disorders - epidemiology
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