“migraine” – example sentences

How to use in-sentence of “migraine”:

+ The World Health Organization says that migraine headache is the most costly brain problem for treatment and disability in the European Union and the United States.

+ The diagnosis of a menstrual migraine is made by keeping track of when the migraines occur for a period of at least three months.

+ An Acephalgic migraine is a kind of migraine without the head pain.

+ Most kinds of migraines start before a person is 30-years-old but this kind of migraine usually starts sometime during middle-age, which is after 40-years-old, and becomes more common as a person gets older.

+ The exact causes of menstrual migraine are not known for sure but there is a link between falling levels of the female hormone “estrogen” and the onset of a migraine attack.

+ Aretaeus on migraine and headache.

+ Episodic migraine is when a person has migraine symptoms for 15 or more days in one month.

+ For a person who has migraines, there are different trigger factors which may set off a migraine attack.

migraine - example sentences
migraine – example sentences

Example sentences of “migraine”:

+ It may happen before a migraine headache starts or during the headache, but vertigo is most common during the period of time between headaches.

+ Retinal migraine is a medical condition that affects the eyes by causing vision loss in one eye for less than 1 hour, usually for about 10–20 minutes.

+ Retinal migraine is thought to happen because of “vasospasm” of the blood vessels that supply blood to the retina, or of the “ophthalmic artery” which is the artery that brings blood to the eye.

+ Abdominal migraine is a kind of migraine which causes a very bad pain in the area of the abdomen, usually around the ‘belly-button’ which is called the “periumbilical area”.

+ Basilar-type migraine aura that causes a occipital region” which is in the lower back part of the brain.

+ Abdominal migraine causes “paroxysmal attacks” – attacks that happen suddenly, and happen again and again.

+ Tepper SJ, Zatochill M, Szeto M, “et al.” Development of a simple menstrual migraine screening tool for obstetric and gynecology clinics: the menstrual migraine assessment tool.

+ They are usually migraines without aura, but in 2012 a case of menstrual migraine with aura was reported, so it is possible.

+ Most people who have basilar-type migraine also have migraines with aura without the basilar symptoms.

+ The diagnosis of migraine is a “clinical diagnosis” which means it is based upon a person’s “medical history” that a person reports to the doctor.

+ About 40% of women and 20% of men will get a migraine at sometime in their life; most of them will get their first migraine before they are 35-years-old.

+ An acephalgic migraine may cause “neurologic dysfunction” in some people, which is when parts of the brain does not function right, and causes different kinds of problems, such as seeing flashing lights or having blind spots, where nothing can be seen.

+ Other doctors believe BPVC is related to migraine headaches, but most children with BPVC do not get headaches.

+ Pure menstrual migraine with sensory aura: a case report.

+ About 15% of people who have a migraine will have an aura.

+ Warning symptoms also called “prodrome symptoms” often happen before a migraine attack.

+ It may happen before a migraine headache starts or during the headache, but vertigo is most common during the period of time between headaches.

+ Retinal migraine is a medical condition that affects the eyes by causing vision loss in one eye for less than 1 hour, usually for about 10–20 minutes.
+ Retinal migraine is thought to happen because of "vasospasm" of the blood vessels that supply blood to the retina, or of the "ophthalmic artery" which is the artery that brings blood to the eye.

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