People Who Suffer Migraine Headaches May Be at Double the Risk of Stroke

Posted: Published on March 24th, 2015

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Newswise MAYWOOD, Ill. People who suffer migraine headaches with auras are at roughly double the risk of suffering the most common type of stroke.

The risk is more than tripled in migraine sufferers who smoke. And migraineurs who smoke and use birth control pills are seven times more likely to suffer strokes.

Migraine headaches also increase the risk of heart attacks and arterial claudication (leg pain due to poor circulation).

Numerous individual studies and meta-analyses have demonstrated that people who have migraines with aura are at a higher risk for ischemic stroke. (A meta-analysis combines results of multiple studies.) Citing these and other studies, Loyola University Medical Center neurologists Michael Star, MD, and Jos Biller, MD, describe the association between stroke and migraine in a chapter in the new text Headache and Migraine Biology and Management.

About 85 percent of strokes are ischemic, meaning they are caused by blood clots in the brain. Migraine with aura is a migraine headache that is preceded by an aura, which typically includes flashes of light, bright spots, blind spots and perhaps tingling in the hands or face.

Recent studies also suggest there is a link between migraines and hemorrhagic strokes, which are caused by bleeding in the brain.

The biology underlying the relationship between migraine and stroke is poorly defined, Drs. Star and Biller write.

Researchers have proposed several possible explanations for the migraine-stroke association:

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People Who Suffer Migraine Headaches May Be at Double the Risk of Stroke

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