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Intra‐arterial injection of lidocaine into middle meningeal artery to treat intractable headaches and severe migraine

Adnan I. Qureshi, Kimberley Pfeiffer, Sehar Babar, Wei Huang, Iryna Lobanova, Muhammad Ishfaq, Brandi R French, Farhan Siddiq, Camilo R. Gomez

2021Journal of Neuroimaging15 citationsDOI

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: We report the results of intra-arterial injection of lidocaine in the middle meningeal artery in patients with intractable headache or status migrainosus. METHODS: We treated four patients with intra-arterial lidocaine (2 mg/ml) in doses up to 50 mg in each middle meningeal artery via a microcatheter bilaterally (except in one patient). In two patients with intractable headache, the daily maximum intensity of headache (graded by 11-point numeric rating scale) was recorded for 7 days postprocedure. In two patients with status migrainosus, migraine-related disability 3 months prior and after treatment using MIDAS (Migraine Disability Assessment) questionnaire was recorded. RESULTS: Intra-arterial lidocaine reduced the headache intensity from 8/10 and 10/10 to 0/10 in the two patients with intractable headaches for 2 days (day 0 and day 1) postprocedure. Despite recurrence of headache on day 2, the intensity was less than preprocedure intensity up to the last day recorded (by 3 and 2 points on day 7). In the two patients with status migrainosus, there was immediate reduction in headache intensity following intra-arterial lidocaine. The post treatment 3-month MIDAS score was lower in both patients compared with pretreatment 3-month score; 3 versus 30 and 55 versus 90. Severe disability preprocedure by MIDAS was reduced to little or no disability postprocedure in one patient. CONCLUSIONS: Intra-arterial lidocaine resulted in amelioration of headache in patients with intractable headache and those with status migrainosus with improvement lasting longer than the short half-life of lidocaine possibly related to central desensitization.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineLidocaineHeadachesAnesthesiaMigraineMiddle meningeal arterySurgeryEmbolizationMigraine and Headache StudiesTrigeminal Neuralgia and TreatmentsNeurological Complications and Syndromes
Intra‐arterial injection of lidocaine into middle meningeal artery to treat intractable headaches and severe migraine | Litcius