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Detoxification of medication-overuse headache by a multidisciplinary treatment programme is highly effective: A comparison of two consecutive treatment methods in an open-label design.

Authors :
Munksgaard, Signe B
Bendtsen, Lars
Jensen, Rigmor H
Source :
Cephalalgia. Aug2012, Vol. 32 Issue 11, p834-844. 11p.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Background: Evidence for optimal medication-overuse headache treatment is lacking. Some experts suggest reduced symptomatic medication with prophylactics from the start of withdrawal, while others suggest a two-month drug-free period with multidisciplinary education.Aim: To examine the acceptability, feasibility and outcome of these two regimes in a non-randomised open-label study.Methods: Patients able to undergo outpatient detoxification, with medication-overuse headache that had previously been unsuccessfully treated by specialists and without significant co-morbidities were treated with (A) individual withdrawal with restricted symptomatic medication and prophylactics from Day 1 or (B) a two-month drug-free period and multidisciplinary education in groups. All patients received close one-year follow-up.Results: Eighty-six of 98 patients completed follow-up. Both treatments proved highly effective—80.0% of Group A and 85.4% of Group B were cured of medication-overuse headache. Headache-frequency reduction was 40.2% in Group A and 38.4% in group B. In 48.9% of group A and 48.8% of group B, headache-frequency reduction was >50%. Programme B required fewer resources from the staff and only 61.9% of these patients needed prophylactics after two months compared with 84.8% in programme A.Conclusions: Both structured detoxification programmes proved highly effective with one-year close follow-up in previously treatment-resistant patients with medication-overuse headache. We suggest multidisciplinary education for patients in groups and delaying initiation of prophylactics until after the detoxification. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03331024
Volume :
32
Issue :
11
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Cephalalgia
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
78318864
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0333102412451363