Wos Açık Erişimli Yayınlar

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    HEADACHE CHARACTERISTICS IN GERIATRIC AGE GROUP ACCORDING TO ICHD-3 BETA VERSION
    (2018) Ciftci, Eda Derle; Toprak, Munire Kilinc; Yildirim, Irem
    Introduction: The aim of this study was to screen patients aged >= 65 years admitted to the Baskent University Hospital Neurology Polyclinic between 2011 and 2013 and classify them according to the International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd edition. Materials and Method: In total, 175 patients (126 females and 49 males) were screened. First, they were separated into primary and secondary headache groups, and the subgroup headache types were then defined within these groups according to the International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd edition; then, the concurrence of accompanying chronic diseases were examined. Results: In the primary headache group, 21.1% of the patients had migraine, 39.4% had tension-type headache, and 51% had trigeminal neuralgia; in the secondary headache group, 24.2% of the patients had headache attributed to hypertension, 18.2% had headache attributed to temporal arteritis, 18.2% had headache attributed to cervical pathology, and 12.1% had headache attributed to intracranial mass. Conclusion: This study was conducted to detect the most commonly seen headache types in geriatric population, and the results of this study are important in terms of increasing awareness of the evaluation of both primary and secondary headaches in geriatric patients. Because the study was conducted with a less patient population, it is important in terms of more accurately demonstrating the factors constituting the etiology of headache in this patient group.
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    Association Between Mitral Valve Prolapse, Migraine, and White Matter Hyperintensities on Magnetic Resonance Imaging
    (2018) Avci, Aynur Yilmaz; Toprak, Munire Kilinc; Lakadamyali, Liatioe; Akinci, Sinan
    Objective: Migraine is linked with an elevation in vascular risk factors, ischemic stroke, and a variety of constitutional brain lesions. However, the pathogenesis of this relationship is still inexplicit. The link between cardiac diseases and comorbid migraine-ischemic stroke might be a vascular disease involving both heart and brain. In this study, an association between mitral valve prolapse (MVP), migraine, and the presence of brain white matter hyperintensities (WMHs) were evaluated among adult subjects with migraine headache devoid of any traditional vascular risk factors. Materials and Methods: Four hundred subjects (200 subjects with migraine headache, 200 healthy controls; age range 18-50 years) were incorporated in the retrospective study. Existence of a headache compatible with migraine was diagnosed according to the International Headache Society-2 criteria. The participants were devoid of any known comorbid diseases, vascular risk factors or inflammatory diseases. All patients, both those with migraine and controls were screened with echocardiography to assess for MVP and with brain magnetic resonance imaging co evaluate the presence of any WMHs. Results: The prevalence of MVP was found to be higher in the migraine group (p<0.011). The odds ratio (OR) for the presence of MVP in patients with migraine compared with controls was 2.44 [95% confidence interval (CI): 1.25-4.74; p=0.0086]. The OR for the presence of WMHs in patients with migraine compared with controls was 5.88 (95% CI: 3.42-10.10; p<0.0001). After modifying for confounding factors, multiple linear regression analyses revealed that migraine was independently and positively associated with MVP (p=0.044), tricuspid regurgitation (p=0.003), and WMHs (p<0.001), and mitral regurgitation and migraine was independently and positively connected with WMHs (p<0.005 and p<0.001, respectively). Conclusion: MVP is found CO be independently associated with migraine when compared with controls. Therefore, we suggest that MVP might have an association with migraine. Nevertheless, we could not demonstrate any correlation between MVP and WMHs. Hence, we suggest that MVP might nor be involved in the evolution of WMHs in migraine