Gupta SN, Gupta VS, Fields DM. Spectrum of complicated migraine in children: A common profile in aid to clinical diagnosis. World J Clin Pediatr 2015; 4(1): 1-12 [PMID: 25664241 DOI: 10.5409/wjcp.v4.i1.1]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Surya N Gupta, MD, Associate Professor, Pediatric Neurology, CAMC, 415 Morris Street, Suite 300, Charleston, WV 25301, United States. suryangupta@rediffmail.com
Research Domain of This Article
Pediatrics
Article-Type of This Article
Review
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World J Clin Pediatr. Feb 8, 2015; 4(1): 1-12 Published online Feb 8, 2015. doi: 10.5409/wjcp.v4.i1.1
Table 1 Represents the very first 3 out of 11 sections of the International Headache Society Classification, the third Edition, 2013[4]
1 Migraine
1.1 Migraine without aura
1.2 Migraine with aura
1.2.1 Migraine with typical aura
1.2.1.1 Typical aura with headache
1.2.1.2 Typical aura without headache
1.2.2 Migraine with brainstem aura
1.2.3 Hemiplegic migraine
1.2.3.1 Familial hemiplegic migraine
1.2.3.1.1 Familial hemiplegic migraine type 1
1.2.3.1.2 Familial hemiplegic migraine type 2
1.2.3.1.3 Familial hemiplegic migraine type 3
1.2.3.1.4 Familial hemiplegic migraine, other loci
1.2.3.2 Sporadic hemiplegic migraine
1.2.4 Retinal migraine
1.3 Chronic migraine
1.4 Complications of migraine
1.4.1 Status migrainosus
1.4.2 Persistent aura without infarction
1.4.3 Migrainous infarction
1.4.4 Migraine aura-triggered seizure
1.5 Probable migraine
1.5.1 Probable migraine without aura
1.5.2 Probable migraine with aura
1.6 Episodic syndromes that may be associated with migraine
1.6.1 Recurrent gastrointestinal disturbance
1.6.1.1 Cyclical vomiting syndrome
1.6.1.2 Abdominal migraine
1.6.2 Benign paroxysmal vertigo
1.6.3 Benign paroxysmal torticollis
Table 2 Lists the frequency of the individual syndromes of complicated migraine reported by the select retrospective studies[7-9]
Study type
Ref.
No. of patients
Frequency of the individual syndromes of complicated migraine reported
Retrospective
[7]
111
Migraine variants 24.3%, basilar type migraine 6.3%, benign paroxysmal vertigo (5.4%), hemiplegic migraine (3.6%), acute confusional migraine (2.7%), benign paroxysmal torticollis (2.7%), typical aura without headache (1.8%), abdominal migraine (1.8%), Alice in Wonderland syndrome (0.9%), ophthalmoplegic migraine (0.9%), and cyclical vomiting (0.9%)
Retrospective
[8]
674
Migraine variants 5.6%, abdominal migraine 39%, benign paroxysmal vertigo 38%, confusional migraine 13%, aura without migraine 9%, paroxysmal torticollis 5%, and a single child with cyclic vomiting
Retrospective, adults in Hyperacute Stroke Units
[9]
375
Conditions other than stroke 31%, which included 22% migraine, 14% functional neurological disorder, 12% syncope, and 6% seizure. In contrast to stroke patients, they tend to be younger, likely to have a brain MRI performed, and had a shorter length of hospital stay
Table 3 Lists the common clinical characteristics of complicated migraine
Clinical characteristics
Presenting feature
Any neurologic sign or symptom other than headache
Age
Commonly, but not limited to, occurs during infancy and childhood
Sex
Boys dominate in migraine variants and girls dominate in the rest of the complicated migraine other than migraine variants
Onset
Acute or sudden but relatively slower than seizure
The context
Patients may have past episode of similar or different symptomatology suggesting migraine attack
Modifying factor
Unlike migraine, none
Family history
Unlike common migraine, in complicated migraine a family history of migraine is almost always present
Course
Transient, may occur once in lifetime or may become episodic but always reversible with the exception to alternating hemiplegia
Examination
With few exceptions, particularly between the episodes, neurologic examination is almost always normal
Differential diagnosis: common/rare
Partial seizures, seizure like activity, transient ischemic attack/migraine like syndrome1 and acute stroke
Investigation
Usually normal including neuroimaging and electroencephalography
Diagnosis
A short course of the presenting symptom between seizure and common migraine defines the complicated migraine
Table 4 Lists the diffrential diagnosis of migraine like syndromes, their presenting symptoms, and the confirmatory laboratory tests
Migraine like syndrome
Presenting symptom
Confirmed by
Aseptic meningitis
Infants and children age < 5 yr presenting with constitutional symptoms together with meningeal signs
Cerebrospinal fluid study molecular testing by polymerase chain reaction[28]
Pseudotumor cerebri
Persistent headache with prominent visual symptoms and head tilt
An increased intracranial opening pressure measured in calm patient with straight leg position
Subarachnoid hemorrhage
Waxing and waning levels of consciousness, apnea, bradycardia before seizure
Brain computerized tomography and/or presence of blood or xanthochromic cerebrospinal fluid
Sinus venous thrombosis
Altered mentation with no obvious etiology or no seizures
Brain computerized tomography with and without contrast or MRV
Arteriovenous malformation
Sensory cutaneous aura with or without seizure or headache
MRA and MRV or computerized tomographic angiography
MELAS
Early symptoms, muscle weakness and pain, recurrent headaches, loss of appetite, vomiting, and seizures
MRI of the brain mimicking acute migrainous stroke but differs by having no respect to a specific cerebral arterial vascular territory
Brain tumor
Progressively worsening headache with onset of focal neurologic sign or seizure
Computerized tomography with contrast or MRI of the brain with and without contrast
Table 5 Shows select cerebrospinal fluid biochemical changes which help to distinguish between bacterial meningitis, aseptic meningitis, and migraine attacks[34-39]
Increased level in cerebrospinal fluid
Comments
Lactate
> 3.5 mmol/L is a good predictor of bacterial meningitis[34]
Procalcitonin
> 0.5 ng/mL is a good predictor of bacterial meningitis[35]
Ferritin
106.39 +/- 86.96 ng/ dL (n = 24) was considerably higher than the viral meningitis group (10.17 +/- 14.09, P < 0.001)[36]
Cytokines
Children with mumps meningitis (n = 19), echovirus 30 meningitis (n = 22), with comparison to children without meningitis (n = 21)[37]
Glutamic acid
An excess of neuroexcitatory amino acids during migraine attacks supports a state of neuronal hyperexcitability[38]
5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid
Level was higher in migraine than the controls[39]
Table 6 List the select reports of the use of multimodaility and their results primarily in children with prolonged hemiplegic migraine[42-45]
Neuroimaging type and the clinical conditions
Study revealed
Multimodality neuroimaging in a single familial hemiplegic migraine[42]
Cytotoxic edema along with evidence of hypometabolism but no evidence of hypoperfusion of the affected cerebral hemisphere
Perfusion- and susceptibility-weighted imaging in a 13-year-old-female 3 h after the right hemiplegia[43]
Hypoperfusion in the left cerebral hemisphere and a matching prominent hypotensity, respectively. Diffusion tensor imaging sequences were normal. These abnormalities completely resolved 24 h after the attack onset
Perfusion- and diffusion-weighted MRI during visual auras in four migraineurs[44]
Cerebral blood flow and volume, both decreased by 16%-53% and 6%-33%, respectively. Mean transit time in the affected occipital cortex was increased by 10%-54%. No changes in the diffusion coefficient were observed during and after the resolution of the visual aura
Brain MRI in six population and 13 clinic-based meta-analysis studies in migraines with and without aura[45]
White matter abnormalities, silent infarct-like lesions, and volumetric changes in both gray and white matter regions were more common in migraineurs than in control groups. These data suggest that migraine may be a risk factor for structural changes in the brain
Citation: Gupta SN, Gupta VS, Fields DM. Spectrum of complicated migraine in children: A common profile in aid to clinical diagnosis. World J Clin Pediatr 2015; 4(1): 1-12