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- IRMS - Nicolae Testemitanu SUMPh
- REVISTE MEDICALE NEINSTITUȚIONALE
- The Moldovan Medical Journal
- Curierul Medical 2009 - 2016
- Curierul Medical, 2015
- Curierul Medical, 2015, Vol. 58, Nr. 4
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12710/13447
Title: | Retroorbital pain and autonomic dysfunctions in patients with migraine |
Authors: | Curca, C. |
Keywords: | ocular pain;migraine |
Issue Date: | 2015 |
Publisher: | The Scientific Medical Association of the Republic of Moldova |
Citation: | CURCA, C. Retroorbital pain and autonomic dysfunctions in patients with migraine. In: Curierul Medical. 2015, vol. 58, no 4, pp. 36-38. ISSN 1875-0666. |
Abstract: | Background. A part of migraine patients complain of unilateral or bilateral ocular pain during migraine access, which may be associated with some
vegetative disorders: ptosis, mydriasis, conjunctival congestion, photo and phonophobia, lacrimation, unvoluntary periorbital muscle contractions, nasal
hypersecretion. It is important to analyze the frequency of ocular pain in patients with migraine, laterality, character and their association with other
autonomic manifestations.
Material and methods: 91 patients with migraine (9.9% men, 90.1% women), out of them 51.6% with chronic migraine, 34.1% with episodic migraine and
14.3% with rare episodic migraine. Patients’ age was 18-63 years. The study included only patients with migraine without other associated neurological
or ocular pathology. Ophthalmologic examination included assessment of visual acuity, perimetry, intraocular pressure measurement in migraine crisis
and lucid period (air-push N 10-21 mm Hg), ophthalmoscopy, biomicroscopy, refractometry if necessary.
Results: According to the statistical analysis of data, 48.4% patients had bilateral ocular pain during migraine attack; 26.3% unilateral headache and eye
pain, 25.3% did not experience pain during the migraine attack. By the type of eye pain 34.1% had non-pulsating retro-orbital pain; 18.7% –pulsating retroorbital
pain; 22% - had superficial eye pain. During the migraine attack 18.7% of migraine patients had unilateral conjunctival congestion, ipsilateral of
headache; 33% bilateral congestion and congestion absent in 48.4% patients. Unilateral lacrimation – 11.4%, bilateral lacrimation in – 25.6%. Photophobia
between attacks of migraine accounted for 38.6% of patients. Unilateral ptosis – 8.4% during the attack, bilateral ptosis – 10.8%. Periorbital muscle tics
during the migraine attacks were observed in 42.2% patients. We found a statistically significant correlation (P <0.001) between the type of eye pain and
intraocular pressure values measured during the migraine attacks and between them.
Conclusions: Migraine attacks are often associated with different character of ocular pain, autonomic disorders and with increasing of intraocular pressure. |
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: | Curierul Medical |
URI: | http://moldmedjournal.md/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Cm-4-PDF.pdf http://repository.usmf.md/handle/20.500.12710/13447 |
ISSN: | 1875-0666 |
Appears in Collections: | Curierul Medical, 2015, Vol. 58, Nr. 4
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