Mindfulness and headache: A "new" old treatment, with new findings.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate the utility of mindfulness approaches for headache management, particularly comparing mindfulness alone to pharmacological treatment for chronic migraine with medication overuse.
Results Summary
Initial findings support mindfulness as a beneficial addition to usual headache care, with preliminary results suggesting comparable effects to medication alone for chronic migraine and medication overuse. However, research remains in early stages, and long-term efficacy requires further investigation.
Population
Patients with headache disorders, specifically chronic migraine accompanied by medication overuse.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
mindfulness | neutral | varied pain conditions | - | - | have been applied to | #1 |
mindfulness | neutral | headache | - | - | have been applied to | #2 |
mindfulness | neutral | headache management | - | - | support the utility of | #3 |
mindfulness alone | no change | medication alone | patients with chronic migraine and medication overuse | - | may produce effects comparable to | #4 |
Background Mindfulness refers to a host of procedures that have been practiced for centuries, but only recently have begun to be applied to varied pain conditions, with the most recent being headache. Methods We reviewed research that incorporated components of mindfulness for treating pain, with a more in depth focus on headache disorders. We also examined literature that has closely studied potential physiological processes in the brain that might mediate the effects of mindfulness. We report as well preliminary findings of our ongoing trial comparing mindfulness alone to pharmacological treatment alone for treating chronic migraine accompanied by medication overuse. Results Although research remains in its infancy, the initial findings support the utility of varied mindfulness approaches for enhancing usual care for headache management. Our preliminary findings suggest mindfulness by itself may produce effects comparable to that of medication alone for patients with chronic migraine and medication overuse. Conclusions Much work remains to more fully document the role and long term value of mindfulness for specific headache types. Areas in need of further investigation are discussed.