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- Stewart J Tepper, Mary Zatochill, Marjorie Szeto, Fred Sheftell, Deborah E Tepper, and Marcelo Bigal.
- Center for Headache and Pain, Neurological Institute, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, OH 44195, USA.
- Headache. 2008 Nov 1; 48 (10): 1419-25.
ObjectiveTo develop and validate a brief questionnaire to screen for menstrual migraine (MM), and to estimate MM prevalence in an obstetrics and gynecology (OB/GYN) setting in a pilot study.MethodsPatients with unknown MM status from a headache clinic completed a 9-item questionnaire. The attributes of each question were compared with a validated headache calendar to develop a 3-item MM questionnaire. The headache calendar and questionnaire were then administered to nonpregnant/nonmenopausal OB/GYN patients. A diagnosis was assigned by a blinded specialist using the headache calendar, and MM prevalence was determined.ResultsThe analysis yielded 3 relevant questions administered to 250 women for our tool, called the Menstrual Migraine Assessment Tool (MMAT): (1) "Do you have headaches that are related to your period (ie, occur between 2 days before the onset of your period, until the third day of your period) most months?" (2) "When my headaches are related to my period, they eventually become severe"; (3) "When my headaches are related to my period, light bothers me more than when I don't have a headache." If question 1 was positive, questions 2 and 3 were answered. Among women responding positively to question 1 and > or =1 other question, the sensitivity and specificity were 0.94 and 0.74, respectively. Of 610 randomly chosen OB/GYN patients, 12.1% had pure MM (ie, migraine exclusively between days +2 and -3 of menses), 10.1% had menstrually related migraine (ie, MM and attacks at other times), and 14.1% had migraine without relation to their menses.ConclusionThe MM screener MMAT exhibits sufficient sensitivity and specificity to assess this frequently disabling condition presenting at the OB/GYN office.
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