100 Migraine drugs, A to Z: Almotriptan

Almotriptan (Axert) belongs to the family of triptans, which are, by far, the most effective drugs for the acute treatment of migraine headaches.

The first drug in this category, sumatriptan (Imitrex) was introduced in 1992 as an injection. Sumatriptan injection remains the most effective treatment – it works for 80% of migraine sufferers. The tablets of sumatriptan and other triptans are a bit less effective, but still provide good relief for over 60% of patients. For some, combining a triptan with 400 mg of ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin) or 500 mg of naproxen (Aleve, Naprosyn, Anaprox) makes it much more effective.

Almotriptan is one of the five relatively fast-acting triptans. The other four are sumatriptan, rizatriptan (Maxalt), zolmitriptan (Zomig), and eletriptan (Relpax). Naratriptan (Amerge) and especially frovatriptan (Frova) take longer to begin helping, but their effect tends to last longer.

In Europe, many triptans are sold without a prescription, which indicates that these are very safe drugs. There is no evidence that triptans cause medication overuse headaches (unlike caffeine and opioid/narcotoc drugs). See my post on daily use of triptans and a recent article debunking the myth of medication overuse headaches.

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