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Browse 1,023 clinical trials for migraine. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
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Showing 781-800 of 1,023 trials
NCT03081416
This is a randomized, single-blind, placebo controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of sub-dissociative dose ketamine versus standard care therapy for acute headache management of in patients presenting to the emergency department with headache as the chief compliant.
NCT02779959
Headache is a common presenting complaint to the emergency department accounting for 1-2% of patient visits. Of these headaches, approximately 90% are migraine, tension headache, or combined presentations. The most commonly used migraine therapy in the ED is intravenous prochlorperazine, but its administration requires close nursing observation, a bed, and the insertion of an intravenous catheter. Buccal prochlorperazine represents an alternative form of delivery that enables rapid achievement of therapeutic blood levels and may lead to symptom resolution. In a randomized, controlled, prospective study,the investigators plan to assess the efficacy of buccal versus intravenous prochlorperazine for the initial emergency department treatment of migraine headaches.
NCT03381924
Introduction: Despite the numerous pharmacological treatment options available for migraine attacks and for the prevention of thereof, less than 30% of patients with migraine are highly satisfied with their current treatment. In recent decades, there has been a radical change in the way we view pain, thanks to developments in neuroscience. It is currently considered that pain does not originate in the peripheral nociceptors, but rather in a network of brain regions (the pain neuromatrix), the synchronous activation of which is necessary and sufficient to generate the perception of pain. Migraine may be the expression of this exaggerated perception of threat, a perception that, from a cultural learning perspective, it may be possible to modify by adjusting beliefs and behaviours that favour the onset of an attack. The aim of this study was to assess the effectiveness of a group educational intervention about concepts of pain neuroscience, in the management of migraine, compared to routine medical interventions, in primary care health centres of Alava.