A high percentage of children, teens and young adults with
migraines appear to have mild deficiencies in vitamin D, riboflavin and
coenzyme Q10 – a vitamin-like substance found in every cell of the body that is
used to produce energy for cell growth and maintenance.
These deficiencies may be involved in patients who
experience migraines, but that is unclear based on existing studies.
"Further studies are needed to elucidate whether
vitamin supplementation is effective in migraine patients in general, and
whether patients with mild deficiency are more likely to benefit from
supplementation," stated Suzanne Hagler, a Headache Medicine fellow in the
division of Neurology at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center and lead
author of the study.
Hagler and colleagues at Cincinnati Children's conducted the
study among patients at the Cincinnati Children's Headache Center. She
presented her findings last week at the 58th Annual Scientific Meeting of the
American Headache Society in San Diego.
Hagler's study drew from a database that included patients
with migraines who, according to Headache Center practice, had baseline blood
levels checked for vitamin D, riboflavin, coenzyme Q10 and folate, all of which
were implicated in migraines, to some degree, by previous and sometimes
conflicting studies.
Many were put on preventive migraine medications and
received vitamin supplementation, if levels were low. Because few received vitamins alone, the
researchers were unable to determine vitamin effectiveness in preventing migraines.
Girls and young women were more likely than boys and young
men to have coenzyme Q10 deficiencies at baseline. Boys and young men were more likely to have
vitamin D deficiency.
Patients with chronic migraines were more likely to have
coenzyme Q10 and riboflavin deficiencies than those with episodic migraines.
Previous studies have indicated that certain vitamins and
vitamin deficiencies may be important in the migraine process. Studies using vitamins to prevent migraines,
however, have had conflicting success.
http://www.drugstorenews.com/article/study-links-vitamin-deficiencies-migraines
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/06/160610140645.htm
Courtesy of: https://neurologistconnect.com/posts/5768a269634e888c4e8b456e?SKUID=6656d46c04553656b04bf4a8e0248071&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiT1dabU1XTTROamRoWVRsaCIsInQiOiJLT3JyUDFvVVhRMlRYUm5FbXRmT2tuaHR4bkhBZThPVEtrbktVQW0xa0llTWZnYitzVlM1XC93QTZqOVJ3amVYZFRwMEwrR1J2WXhaWlFQR2lCK1R3UmluMFV5dDJRcFNtSHJxZUtNMzhab2s9In0%3D
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