The effect of aerobic exercise on the number of migraine days, duration and pain intensity in migraine: a systematic literature review and meta-analysis.

The journal of headache and pain. 2019;20(1):16
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In the age group 15–49 years, migraine is the top cause of years lived with disability, magnifying its impact on the working population. The aim of this study was to summarise the literature published after 2004 on the effect of aerobic exercise in patients with migraine on the number of migraine days, attack duration and pain intensity. This study is a systematic review and meta-analysis of six studies. Result indicate that aerobic exercise can reduce pain intensity (20–54%) in patients with migraine (moderate quality evidence). Furthermore, low quality evidence indicates that aerobic exercise can decrease pain intensity or duration of migraine attacks. Authors conclude that there is moderate evidence that aerobic exercise decreases the number of migraine days.

Abstract

BACKGROUND In patients with frequent migraine, prophylactic treatments are used. Patients often request non-pharmacological alternatives. One treatment option can be aerobic exercise. The value of aerobic exercise as prophylactic treatment however needs to be determined. METHODS A systematic review and meta-analysis was performed to investigate the result of aerobic exercise on the number of migraine days, duration and pain intensity in patients with migraine. After screening three online databases, PubMed, Cochrane library and Web of Science, using predefined in- and exclusion criteria, six studies were retained. Pooling of data was performed when possible. RESULTS Significant reductions in the number of migraine days after aerobic exercise treatment were found with a mean reduction of 0.6 ± 0.3 migraine days/month. Other outcomes were too variable to pool due to heterogeneity of outcome measurements. Unpooled data revealed small to moderate reductions in attack duration (20-27%) and pain intensity (20-54%) after aerobic exercise intervention. Various exercise intensities are applied. CONCLUSION There is moderate quality evidence that in patients with migraine aerobic exercise therapy can decrease the number of migraine days. No conclusion for pain intensity or duration of attacks can be drawn. Effect sizes are small due to a lack of uniformity. For future studies, we recommend standardized outcome measures and sufficiently intense training programs. TRIAL REGISTRATION CRD42018091178 .

Lifestyle medicine

Fundamental Clinical Imbalances : Neurological
Patient Centred Factors : Mediators/Migraine
Environmental Inputs : Physical exercise
Personal Lifestyle Factors : Exercise and movement
Functional Laboratory Testing : Not applicable

Methodological quality

Jadad score : Not applicable
Allocation concealment : Not applicable

Metadata

Nutrition Evidence keywords : Migraine ; Exercise