If you are having surgery and have had migraines, read this!
There is a new and surprising connection between postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV) and migraines. It offers a very effective treatment that will relieve the suffering of tens of thousands of patients.
Many migraine patients tell me that they develop a severe migraine following surgery. Possible reasons include the stress of the operation, fasting before surgery, the effect of anesthetic drugs, pain medicines given after surgery, an awkward head position, and caffeine withdrawal. But some patients report severe nausea and vomiting that occurs without a headache.
PONV affects about 30% of all patients undergoing surgery under general anesthesia. Some patients develop intractable vomiting that does not respond to typical nausea medications even though there are more than a dozen such medications. This often requires hospital admission when surgery is done in an ambulatory (outpatient) setting. Admissions for PONV are more common than for surgical or cardiovascular complications. Intractable PONV can cause opening of the sutured wound, aspiration pneumonia, bleeding, and other complications.
It appears that patients who suffer from migraines or have had migraines in the past are more prone to develop intractable PONV. I learned about this last month while participating in a headache conference in Zurich. Dr. Leander Sakellaris, a Swiss anesthesiologist and pain specialist, told me about his Masters degree thesis on this topic. He allowed me to share its full text – MasterThesis-PONV.
His thesis describes ways to reduce the risk of PONV. If possible, ask for surgery to be done under regional and not general anesthesia. Ask if total intravenous anesthesia is an option. Avoid nitrous oxide, etomidate, thiopental and after surgery, opioid drugs. Good hydration during the operation is also helpful. I would also add a request for an intravenous (IV) infusion of magnesium. IV magnesium is a standard procedure after open heart surgery because it prevents irregular heart beats (arrhythmias), but it is not given after other types of surgery. Magnesium is depleted by physical and emotional stress and surgery induces a major stress response.
The most fascinating part of Dr. Sakellaris’ thesis is the description of eight patients he has encountered in his practice. They all developed intractable PONV but did not have a headache. However, they all had a history of migraines or headaches suggestive of migraines. After they failed to respond to the usual nausea medications, Dr. Skellaris gave them either an injection of sumatriptan or intranasal zolmitriptan. They all had a prompt and dramatic relief of their vomiting and were able to go home.
This should not be very surprising because abdominal migraines and cyclic vomiting syndrome, conditions without a headache that are considered to be migraine variants, also respond to triptans.
Dr. Sakellaris made an important discovery that deserves to be widely disseminated. Forty million Americans suffer from migraines, millions of Americans undergo surgery under general anesthesia, of whom 30% suffer from PONV. It is very likely that many thousands of patients with PONV who do not respond to standard therapies could be helped by triptans.
If you suffer from migraines or have had them in the past and are having an operation, you may want to bring with you an injection of sumatriptan. Outpatient surgery clinics may not have it while hospitals may take a long time to get it to you. I would discuss this with your surgeon and the anesthesiologist before surgery.
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