• J Med Life · Apr 2018

    Transcranial magnetic stimulation in migraine prophylaxis.

    • P Leahu, A Matei, and S Groppa.
    • "N. Testemitanu" State Medical and Pharmaceutical University.
    • J Med Life. 2018 Apr 1; 11 (2): 175-176.

    AbstractTranscranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) is a non-invasive brain stimulation method used worldwide to make causality-based inferences about brain-behavior interactions, assess cortical reactivity, and map functionally relevant brain regions inducing a controlled current pulse in a specific cortical area. Clinical applications of TMS have shown promising results in the treatment of a vast number of psychiatric and neurological conditions such as headache disorders - migraine being one of the most encountered. In patients with migraine, the pharmacologic therapy is divided in urgent/ abortive treatment of the attack and prophylactic one. As first-line drugs simple analgesics and non-steroidal inflammatory are preferred. Nevertheless, many individuals continue to have attacks refractory to various prophylactic and/or abortive therapies, while others are at high risk of developing medication overuse headache. Among non-pharmacologic therapies TMS has been broadly studied as a preventive migraine treatment with good outcome results. Abbreviations: DLPFC - Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, FDA - United States Food and Drug Administration, HF-TMS - High frequency transcranial magnetic stimulation, TMS - Transcranial magnetic stimulation, rTMS - Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation.

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