Current pain and headache reports
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Curr Pain Headache Rep · Dec 2014
ReviewWhat is the evidence for the use of corticosteroids in migraine?
Corticosteroids are widely prescribed for the management of migraine attacks. The earliest clinical studies examining the efficacy of corticosteroid monotherapy for managing migraine attacks date back to 1952. Since then, 26 heterogeneous clinical studies and four meta-analyses have been conducted to assess the efficacy of corticosteroids in either aborting acute migraine attacks, prolonged migraine attacks or recurrent headaches. ⋯ Different forms of oral and parenteral corticosteroids in either single-dose or short-tapering schedules are prescribed; there are clinical studies supporting the efficacy of both methods. Corticosteroids can be administered safely up to six times annually. Corticosteroids are also useful in managing patients who frequent emergency departments with "medication-seeking behavior." Migraine patients with refractory headaches, history of recurrent headaches, severe baseline disability, and status migrainosus were found to have the most beneficial response from corticosteroid therapy.
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Pharmacotherapy, the main treatment option for neuropathic pain, remains a major clinical challenge. The most commonly studied drug classes in the context of neuropathic pain-antidepressants, anticonvulsants, and opioids-have only limited efficacy and frequent dose-limiting adverse effects. ⋯ A few clinical trials using various drug combinations for neuropathic pain have already been published but yielded inconsistent results, partially due to methodological problems associated with the conduction of such trials. Nonetheless, combination therapy remains an intriguing treatment option for neuropathic pain, awaiting future high-quality validating trials.