Objective
To examine the influence of acute migraine medication adherence on migraine disability and acute medication satisfaction.
MethodsAdults with migraine completed three months of daily electronic diaries assessing headache symptoms, acute medication taken, acute medication satisfaction, and daily migraine disability. Repeated measures mixed-effects models examined the effect of initial medication type [migraine-specific medication (MSM) vs. over-the-counter analgesic (OTC) vs. an opiate/barbiturate], the severity of pain at dosing, and their interaction with daily migraine disability and satisfaction with acute medication.
ResultsParticipants (N = 337; 92.5% female; 91.1% Caucasian, non-Hispanic; 84.0% with episodic migraine) recorded 29,722 diary days. Participants took acute medication on 96.5% of 8090 migraine days. MSM was most frequently taken first (58%), followed by OTC (29.9%) and an opiate/barbiturate (12.1%). Acute medication was most frequently taken when pain was mild (41.2%), followed by moderate (37.7%) and severe pain (11.4%). Initially dosing with MSM while pain was mild was associated with the lowest daily disability [medication x pain at dosing F (4, 6336.12) = 58.73, p < .001] and highest acute medication satisfaction [medication x pain at dosing F (4, 3867.36) = 24.00, p < .001].
ConclusionUsing an MSM (triptan or ergot) first was associated with the lowest migraine disability and highest acute medication satisfaction.
from Cephalalgia via xlomafota13 on Inoreader http://ift.tt/2awcqyS
via IFTTT
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου