Migraine is a complex and often incapacitating collection of neurological symptoms that vary from individual to individual.
Affecting about 39 million Americans – 85 percent of whom are women - migraine is the third most common and the sixth most disabling illness in the world, prompting 1.2 million emergency department visits each year in this country alone.
More than just a bad headache, migraine is a neurological disease causing such crippling symptoms as throbbing pain often on one side of the head, visual disturbances, nausea and vomiting, dizziness, tingling or numbness in the extremities or face, and extreme sensitivity to sound, light and smell. Attacks typically last from four to 72 hours, although millions experience daily migraine or at least 15 migraine days a month.
For many migraine patients, this is a chronic condition affecting all aspects of their life. Migraine diminish their ability to work and enjoy life fully, and many suffer from depression, anxiety and sleep disturbances.