Women who have migraines are far more likely to suffer heart attacks or strokes, experts warn.
A
20-year study of more than 115,000 nurses found that, overall,
sufferers had a 50 per cent greater chance of developing major heart and
circulation problems. Nearly
one in six were diagnosed with migraines at the beginning of the study,
and they had a 39 per cent bigger risk of a heart attack, 62 per cent
increased danger
of stroke and 37 per cent higher likelihood of
cardiovascular death.
Around eight million Britons – three quarters of them women – have migraine, which cause dizziness, nausea and crippling pain.
Previous
research had linked migraines to the risk of having a stroke, but few
studies have associated them with cardiovascular diseases in general.
The latest findings are based on a data from the US Nurses’ Health Study, which tracked 115,541 women from 1989 to 2011.
The women were 25 to 42 at the beginning of the project, and were free from angina and cardiovascular disease.
By
the end of the study 1,329 had suffered major cardiovascular events,
including 678 heart attacks and 651 strokes. In addition, 223 died as a
result of heart problems.
The researchers from Harvard Medical
School said more research was needed to determine whether treatment to
prevent migraines could cut these risks – but said anyone suffering
migraines should have their heart risk assessed.
Women who have migraines are more likely to have high blood pressure and high cholesterol and be overweight.
But the
scientists said that this was not the only link – and it may be that
migraines are part of the same underlying biological problems that cause
all ‘endovascular’ issues – those that effect the inside of the blood
vessels.
Writing
in the British Medical Journal, they said: ‘Evidence suggests that the
pathophysiology of migraine can also be viewed in part as a systemic
disorder affecting the endovascular system.’
The
authors, who included German scientists from the Institute of Public
Health in Berlin, added: ‘These results further add to the evidence that
migraine should be considered an important risk marker for
cardiovascular disease, at least in women.’
In
a linked editorial, Rebecca Burch, of Harvard Medical School, and
Melissa Rayhill, from the State University of New York at Buffalo,
cautioned that women should not be worried about the link.
They stressed that individual women were at very low risk – even if they had migraines.
The
223 women who died of heart problems represented less than 0.2 per cent
of all participants. This risk was higher among migraine patients, but
still tiny.
‘The
magnitude of the risk should not be over-emphasized,’ they said. ‘It is
small at the level of the individual patient, but still important at a
population level.’
Experts
had already called for people who suffer the worst migraines to get
cholesterol-reducing statins automatically as a precaution to cut their
heart risk, even though the link with heart issues had not been proven.
Source:Dailymail
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