Biobehavioral treatments of migraine

Handb Clin Neurol. 2024:199:155-169. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-12-823357-3.00031-8.

Abstract

Pharmacotherapies are the mainstays of migraine management, though it is not uncommon for them to be poorly tolerated, contraindicated, or only modestly effective. There is a clear need for nonpharmacologic migraine therapies, either employed alone or in combination with pharmacotherapies. Behavioral and psychosocial factors known to contribute to the onset, exacerbation, and persistence of primary headache disorders (e.g., stress, sleep, diet) serve as targets within a self-management model for migraine-a model that features headache pharmacotherapies, behavioral skills training, medication adherence facilitation, relevant lifestyle changes, and techniques to limit headache-related impairment. Behavioral self-management interventions for migraine with the strongest empirical validation (e.g., relaxation training, biofeedback training, cognitive-behavior therapies) presently are available in specialty headache treatment centers and routinely show promise for reducing headache pain frequency/severity and related impairment, reducing reliance on pharmacotherapies, enhancing personal control over headache activity, and reducing headache-related distress and symptoms. These approaches may be particularly well-suited among patients for whom pharmacotherapies are unwanted, poorly tolerated, or contraindicated. Though underutilized, clinical trials indicate that new and well-established behavioral therapies are similarly effective to migraine medications for migraine prevention among adults and can be successfully employed in various settings.

Keywords: Behavioral treatment; Biofeedback; Migraine headache; Relaxation; Self-management; Stress management.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Behavior Therapy / methods
  • Biofeedback, Psychology / methods
  • Headache / psychology
  • Humans
  • Migraine Disorders* / therapy
  • Relaxation Therapy / methods