In-Patient
Treatment of Chronic Daily Headache Using Dihydroergotamine:
a Long-term Follow-up Study
Tamara
Pringsheim and David Howse
Abstract:
Background: The treatment of chronic daily headache
(CDH) due to medication overuse remains a common and difficult
problem. For selected patients refractory to outpatient management
we have used a treatment protocol using dihydroergotamine
(DHE) as introduced by Raskin, during a brief (typically 48
hours) in-patient stay. While many studies have documented
the short-term efficacy of the DHE protocol, there are limited
data on its long-term effects. The purpose of this study was
to evaluate the efficacy of the protocol on headache frequency
and severity, analgesic use, absences from work, and quality
of life, at three months post treatment and the present time.
Methods: A retrospective chart review of all
patients admitted for the DHE protocol from 1991 to 1996 revealed
174 cases. Of these, 132 patients were interviewed by phone.
Results: The DHE protocol was shown to decrease
headache frequency, severity, headache medication use, and
absences from work both at three months and the time of interview.
Conclusion: This study has the largest patient
base and the longest follow-up period for the use of DHE for
CDH. The results confirm that the DHE protocol is helpful
in breaking the cycle of CDH, although the long-term outcomes
of this study are more conservative than other studies have
reported.
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Can.
J. Neurol. Sci. 1998; 25: 146-150
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