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      Pharmacological trials in migraine: it's time to reappraise where the headache is and what the pain is like.

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          Abstract

          Most pharmacological trials deal with migraine as if it were a clinically homogeneous disease, and when detailing its characteristics, they usually report only the presence, or absence, of aura and attack frequency but provide no information on pain location, a non-trivial clinical detail. The past decade has witnessed growing emerging evidence suggesting that individuals with unilateral pain, especially those with associated unilateral cranial autonomic symptoms, are more responsive than others to trigeminal-targeted symptomatic and preventive therapy with drugs such as triptans or botulinum toxin. A simple way for migraine research treatment to take a step forward might be to step back, reappraise, and critically evaluate easily obtainable patient-reported clinical findings along with current knowledge on pain features.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Headache
          Headache
          Wiley
          1526-4610
          0017-8748
          Mar 2015
          : 55
          : 3
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Headache and Pain Unit, Department of Neurological, Motor and Sensorial Sciences, IRCCS San Raffaele Pisana, Rome, Italy.
          Article
          10.1111/head.12498
          25523108
          c93b8845-963a-4ec9-b4db-b478c42ff9e2
          History

          unilateral cranial autonomic symptom,botulinum toxin,migraine,pain location,treatment,trigemino-autonomic reflex

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