Zonisamide Versus Propranolol in Migraine
Zonisamide Versus Propranolol in Migraine, a Randomized Controlled Single-blinded Trial
Kafrelsheikh University
600 participants
Mar 29, 2024
INTERVENTIONAL
Conditions
Summary
Investigators aim to compare the effect of zonisamide versus propranolol in migraine by assessing the absolute reduction in MMD in each group, the percentage of patients who achieved ≥ 50% reduction in the monthly headache days frequency compared to the baseline frequency
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria2
- Naive migraine patients, according to the International Classification of Headache Disorders 3rd edition,
- age from 10 to 55 years
Exclusion Criteria2
- Patients with major neurological disorders such as ( epilepsy, ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke, multiple sclerosis, mitochondrial diseases, brain tumors, and patients with essential tremors.
- patients with malignancy, collagen, liver, and renal diseases. patients with cardiovascular diseases like hypertension and diabetes patients with valvular and ischemic heart diseases, bradycardia or heart blocks, congestive heart failure patients who received prophylactic treatment for migraine, patients with any contraindications to drugs used in the study patients with bronchial asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
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Interventions
The arm will include 300 migraine patients diagnosed according to ICHD3-beta criteria. all patients received zonisamide 100 mg daily and acetaminophen 500-1000 mg on migraine attack. We will assess The change in migraine days per 28 days, the number of migraine days after three months of treatment, and the percentage of patients who achieved ≥ 50% reduction in the monthly headache days frequency compared to the baseline frequency (14). HIT-6 score reduction in each group after three months of treatment. The safety of zonisamide was evaluated by monitoring and documenting treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAE) in patients through regular follow-up procedures for three months.
The arm will include 300 migraine patients diagnosed according to ICHD3-beta criteria. All patients received propranolol 160 mg daily and acetaminophen 500-1000 mg on migraine attack. We will assess The change in migraine days per 28 days, the number of migraine days after three months of treatment, and the percentage of patients who achieved ≥ 50% reduction in the monthly headache days frequency compared to the baseline frequency (14). HIT-6 score reduction in each group after three months of treatment. The safety of lacosamide was evaluated by monitoring and documenting treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAE) in patients through regular follow-up procedures for three months.
Locations(1)
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NCT06361446