Temporal, Environmental, and Genetic Factors Regulating Exercise and Migraine

Category Primary study
Registry of Trialsclinicaltrials.gov
Year 2020
Chronic pain, of which migraine is among the most common, affects 100 million US adults and costs between $560 to $635 billion dollars annually. There is a need for effective, low-cost non-pharmacological strategies to reduce migraine load in migraineurs (based on International Headache Society classification International Classification of Headache Disorders \[ICHD\]-3; experience headache \[migraine-like or tension-type-like\] on 15+ days/month for 3+ months, and have migraine headaches \[either with aura or without aura\] on 8+ days/month). This represents an area of interest, as common migraine medications induce central nervous system side-effects including aphasia, ataxia, somnolescence, and vertigo; and 79% of suffers have an interest in trying novel treatment strategies with lower adverse effects than medications. Exercise has been shown to be a non-pharmacological intervention to reduce migraine burden. However, how environmental (i.e. - time-of-day, exposure to nature) and genetic factors (i.e. - polymorphisms in circadian and migraine associated genes) impact the laudatory effects of exercise remains unknown. There are independently established heritable components to migraine frequency (65%), circadian rhythm (70%), and aerobic power during exercise (66%). Thus, the central hypothesis is that an optimal environment can improve the exercise-induced reduction in migraine load, which is influenced by genetic heritability of migraine related gene polymorphisms.
Epistemonikos ID: 1ebdebc7933c4b12419a23a3ff4ce93e1949f476
First added on: May 07, 2024