FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE ON December 17, 2014
Migraine May Double Risk for Facial Paralysis
MINNEAPOLIS -
Migraine headache may double the risk of a nervous system condition that causes facial paralysis, called Bell鈥檚 palsy, according to a new study published in the December 17, 2014, online issue of the medical journal of the Bell鈥檚 palsy affects between 11 and 40 per 100,000 people each year. Most people with Bell鈥檚 palsy recover completely. Headaches are the most common disorder of the nervous system and affect about 12 percent of the US population. 鈥淭his is a very new association between migraine and Bell鈥檚 palsy,鈥 said study author Shuu-Jiun Wang, MD, with National Yang-Ming University and Taipei Veterans General Hospital in Taipei, Taiwan. 鈥淥ur study also suggests that these two conditions may share a common underlying link.鈥 For the study, two groups of 136,704 people ages 18 and older, one group with migraine and one without, were followed for an average of three years. During that time, 671 people in the migraine group and 365 of the non-migraine group were newly diagnosed with Bell鈥檚 palsy. People with migraine were twice as likely to develop Bell鈥檚 palsy even after researchers accounted for other factors that could increase the risk of the condition, such as sex, high blood pressure and diabetes. 鈥淚nfection, inflammation or heart and vascular problems could be shared causes for these diseases,鈥 Wang said. 鈥淚f a common link is identified and confirmed, more research may lead to better treatments for both conditions.鈥 The study was supported by the National Science Council of Taiwan, the Taipei Veterans General Hospital, National Yang-Ming University and the Taiwan Ministry of 好色先生. To learn more about migraine and Bell鈥檚 palsy, please visit .