A nosographic analysis of the migraine aura in a general population.

The study presented here is the first detailed nosographic analysis of migraine aura, diagnosed using the criteria of the International Headache Society, in a sufficiently large sample for statistical analysis. Of 4,000 people, 163 had migraine with aura. Sixty-two had attacks of migraine aura with headache as well as migraine aura without headache, and seven had exclusively migraine aura without headache. Visual symptoms were most frequent (99%), followed by sensory (31%), aphasic (18%) and motor (6%) symptoms. Those with several types of aura symptoms had visual aura in virtually every attack, while sensory, motor and aphasic aura were present only in a small number of their attacks. The typical visual aura starts as a flickering, uncoloured, zig-zag line in the centre of the visual field and affect the central vision. It gradually progresses towards the periphery of one hemifield and often leaves a scotoma. The typical sensory aura is unilateral, starts in the hand, progresses towards the arm and then affects the face and tongue. The typical motor aura is half-sided and affects the hand and arm. The visual, sensory and aphasic auras rarely lasted > 1 h, while the motor aura did in 67% (six out of nine). Four people had exclusively acute onset visual aura. The duration of the aura and the characteristics of the ensuing headache were typical for migraine with aura, suggesting that acute onset aura is a real phenomenon. Headache followed the aura in 93%, headache and aura occurred simultaneously in 4% and aura followed headache in 3%. The characteristic spread of each symptom and the sequence of different symptoms suggest that cortical spreading depression is the mechanism underlying the migraine aura. Our results do not suggest that alterations of the diagnostic criteria of the International Headache Society are needed. The intra-individual variation of aura symptoms shown in this study indicates that a simplification of the International Classification of Diseases, Neurological Adaptation is appropriate.

[1]  E. Hare Personal observations on the spectral march of migraine. , 1966, Journal of the neurological sciences.

[2]  P. Bradshaw,et al.  HEMIPLEGIC MIGRAINE, A CLINICAL STUDY. , 1965, The Quarterly journal of medicine.

[3]  R. Lipton,et al.  Questionnaire Versus Clinical Interview in the Diagnosis of Headache , 1992, Headache.

[4]  C. Fisher Late-life Migraine Accompaniments As A Cause Of Unexplained Transient Ischemic Attacks , 1980, Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences / Journal Canadien des Sciences Neurologiques.

[5]  C. M. Fisher Late-life migraine accompaniments--further experience. , 1986, Stroke.

[6]  Classic migraine , 1986, Acta neurologica Scandinavica.

[7]  J. Dartigues,et al.  A Nationwide Survey of Migraine in France: Prevalence and Clinical Features in Adults , 1992, Cephalalgia : an international journal of headache.

[8]  T. Olsen,et al.  Timing and topography of cerebral blood flow, aura, and headache during migraine attacks , 1990, Annals of neurology.

[9]  J. Olesen,et al.  Impact of headache on sickness absence and utilisation of medical services: a Danish population study. , 1992, Journal of epidemiology and community health.

[10]  K. Lashley PATTERNS OF CEREBRAL INTEGRATION INDICATED BY THE SCOTOMAS OF MIGRAINE , 1941 .

[11]  J. Olesen,et al.  Improved Description of the Migraine Aura by a Diagnostic Aura Diary , 1994, Cephalalgia : an international journal of headache.

[12]  J. Olesen,et al.  Migraine With Aura and Migraine Without Aura: An Epidemiological Study , 1992, Cephalalgia : an international journal of headache.

[13]  A. A. Leão,et al.  SPREADING DEPRESSION OF ACTIVITY IN THE CEREBRAL CORTEX , 1944 .

[14]  B. Rasmussen,et al.  Presentation of a New Instrument: The Diagnostic Headache Diary , 1992, Cephalalgia : an international journal of headache.

[15]  D. Bana,et al.  Observations on Prodromes of Classic Migraine in a Headache Clinic Population , 1986, Headache.

[16]  G. Manzoni,et al.  Classic migraine--clinical findings in 164 patients. , 1985, European neurology.

[17]  Fisher Cm Late-life migraine accompaniments as a cause of unexplained transient ischemic attacks. , 1980 .

[18]  M. Farinotti,et al.  Assessment of International Headache Society Diagnostic Criteria: A Reliability Study , 1994, Cephalalgia : an international journal of headache.

[19]  J. Olesen,et al.  Prevalence and sex-ratio of the subtypes of migraine. , 1995, International journal of epidemiology.

[20]  F. Rose,et al.  Asymmetry of the aura and pain in migraine. , 1981, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[21]  J BERKSON,et al.  Limitations of the application of fourfold table analysis to hospital data. , 1946, Biometrics.