Oscillating Mechanical Stimulation of the Craniocervical Region as Physical Therapy for Chronic Migraine: A Pilot Trial ()
1. Introduction
When a patient suffers from headache on more than 15 days a month for 3 months and when the headache manifests as migraine on 8 of those 15 days, the patient is said to be suffering from chronic migraine (CM) [1] . Patients who suffer frequent headache attacks or overuse analgesics are at an increased risk of conversion to chronicity [2] . The European Headache Foundation has proposed that CM be defined as migraine in the absence of drug abuse for which three or more types of migraine prophylaxis have been ineffective [3] . On a global scale, CM is related not only to an increased economic burden, i.e., a drain on medical resources, but also to lost productivity [4] . Peripheral subcutaneous injection of botulinum toxin has been shown to be effective as prophylaxis against CM [5] [6] , and randomized, controlled studies of neuromodulation by percutaneous supraorbital stimulation in the absence of drug administration have shown the usefulness of this form of therapy [7] . We have focused on nondrug, percutaneous treatment and developed an oscillating mechanical stimulation therapy (OST), which broadly targets the craniocervical region and has been shown to be effective when administered at weekly intervals [8] . OST was originally attempted in Western countries as a form of physical therapy for medically refractory chronic pain, and a systematic review has been reported of its use in cases of calcific tendinitis of the rotator cuff [9] . There are very few studies from the field of migraine research, however.
2. Material and Methods
The safety of the technique used in the study was verified during preparatory research [8] , and the study protocol was approved by the institutional review board of Shizuoka Red Cross Hospital (approval No. 2015-03), and this study was registered by the UMIN (ID: 00017253). The selected patients were given an oral and written explanation of the prospective trial, and they were enrolled between February 2016 and January 2017 after providing written informed consent.
2.1. Patients
The selected patients met the following inclusion criteria: 1) CM had been diagnosed according to the International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd edition (beta version) [10] ; 2) the CM was refractory, i.e., according to the patient’s migraine diary or medical history, the headaches did not improve in severity or frequency, despite acute drug or prophylactic treatment; 3) the patient was ≥20 years of age when providing consent; 4) the patient was deemed capable of outpatient visits; and 5) the patient’s migraine drug dosage and method of administration remained unchanged during the 2-week period before the therapeutic intervention was begun. Refractory CM was defined as CM for which three types of grade A-recommended prophylactic drugs with different mechanisms of action were ineffective, in accordance with the Clinical Practice Guideline for Chronic Headache 2013 [11] . The patients underwent cervical spine radiography before and after OST, and safety was confirmed.
Patients not included in the study were 1) those with chronic headache other than CM; 2) those who were participating in another trial or had participated in another trial up to 1 month prior to the time the intervention would have been started; 3) those with concomitant compression of the spinal cord, resulting, for example, from a facial or craniocervical fracture; and those with severe cervical vertebral disease, intervertebral disc herniation, or ossification of the yellow ligament; 4) those with a history of osteoporosis; 5) those presenting with a severe cutaneous abnormality affecting the face, head, or neck; 6) those whose physical condition had deteriorated subsequent to massage or chiropractic adjustment to the craniocervical region; 7) those who had undergone surgical treatment for a cranial or spinal column disorder within the previous 6 months before this treatment; 8) those scheduled to undergo surgery during what would have been the treatment period; 9) those presenting with dementia; 10) those with malignancy requiring treatment; 11) those with psychological symptoms or a psychological disorder, such as severe confusion, hallucinations, delusions, or abnormal behavior; and 12) those who were pregnant.
2.2. Method of Treatment
OST was delivered by means of an electric percussion hammer (Hammons Impact; Aichi Electronics Industrial Co., Ltd., Aichi, Japan). Treatment was performed once a week over a period of 8 weeks. Each week, percutaneous mechanical OST was performed at several predetermined sites, so that by the end of the treatment period, OST had been performed twice at a total of 26 sites (Table 1 and Table 2): 13 on the face and head, 4 on the neck, and 9 on the upper back (Figure 1(a), Figure 1(b)). The device has been approved by the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan (approval no. 23B2X00010), and its use is not limited to specific disorders. It has been used to manage lumbar pain associated with intervertebral disc herniation, neck pain associated with acute sprain and cervical disc herniation, and rehabilitation after surgery for ligament rupture or fracture. In such cases, stimulation of 0.37 N 0.87 N is provided over a period of 2 to 3 months, and although the precise mechanism underlying the therapeutic effects is unknown, the stimulation is presumed to enhance the healing process.
Depending on the stimulation site, the patient is placed in the dorsal or prone position during treatment. The stimulus frequency is set to 6 Hz, and the duration of OS at each site is 6 seconds. An OS intensity of 5 to 15 pounds is selected, depending on the site and the number of treatments. To ensure appropriate transmission of the oscillating mechanical stimulation based on the pressure and density of the tissue at the stimulation site, the stimulation depth is set to low, medium, or high. A single-prong, double-prong, or wide-prong head, which comes into contact with the patient’s skin, is selected on the basis of the site of application.
For the study patients, if the migraine prophylaxis remained unchanged for 3 months before the start of OST and could be provided concomitantly, it was
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Table 1. Oscillating craniocervical stimulation sites.
(S), single probe; (D), double probe; (W), wide probe.
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Figure 1. (a) Oscillating craniocervical stimulation sites in the front. 1, Middle eyebrow; 2, infraorbital foramen; 3, nearby medial ocular angle; 4, upper ear; 5, upper lateral forehead; 6, lateral nostril; 7, medial eyelashes; 8, lateral frontal area; 9, supraorbital foramen; 10, outer edge of the eyelashes; 11, lower edge of the zygomatic bone; 12, mental foramen; 13, upper part of the gonial angle. (b) Oscillating craniocervical stimulation sites in the back 14, Lower portion of the mastoid process; 15, external occipital protuberance; 16, neighborhood of the spinous process of the second cervical vertebra; 17, neighborhood of the spinous process of the first thoracic vertebra; 18, neighborhood of the spinous process of the second thoracic vertebra; 19, neighborhood of the spinous process of the third thoracic vertebra; 20, neighborhood of the spinous process of the fifth thoracic vertebra; 21, scapula; 22, neighborhood of the spinous process of the fifth cervical vertebra; 23, lateral side of the spinous process of the second thoracic vertebra; 24, lateral side of the spinous process of the third thoracic vertebra; 25, lateral side of the spinous process of the fourth thoracic vertebra; 26, lateral side of the spinous process of the fifth thoracic vertebra.
continued during the treatment period. Drugs were used for migraine attacks but were not introduced for prophylaxis.
2.3. Data Collection and Statistical Analysis
For evaluation of OST, the following information was obtained: the patient’s individual clinical characteristics (age, sex, migraine drug treatment); the number of migraine days, derived from the patient’s headache diary; the Headache Impact Test (HIT-6) [12] and Visual Analog Scale (VAS) [13] scores; the frequency of acute therapy; and the allodynia score, derived from the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) [14] , Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7) [15] , and allodynia scales. These study variables were obtained by neurologists before and after the start of treatment. Values are shown as means ± SD. The HIT-6, VAS, and PHQ-9 scores were evaluated 3 and 6 weeks after the start of treatment. Changes in the HIT-6, VAS, GAD-7, PHQ-9, and allodynia scores were examined by one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA). SPSS version 21 (IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows; IBM Corp, Armonk, NY, USA) was used for statistical analysis, and p < 0.05 was considered to indicate a significant difference.
3. Results
The clinical characteristics of the 10 enrollees are shown in Table 3. One patient
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Table 3. Demographic and baseline characteristics.
One patient (patient No.10) withdrew from the study at the request of the family practitioner who wanted the patient to discontinue the treatment. Therefore, 9 patients completed the treatment.
withdrew from the study at the request of the family practitioner who wanted the patient to discontinue the treatment. Nine patients completed the treatment. 9 patients completed the study protocol for 8 weeks. No severe or serious adverse events occurred.
Migraine frequency did not change after treatment; the mean frequency was 21.7 ± 6.4 days per month before treatment and 19.3 ± 7.3 days per month after treatment (Figure 2). However, the HIT-6 scores improved significantly from 67.0 ± 8.2 before treatment to 61.4 ± 7.1 (p = 0.007) after 3 weeks, 61.1 ± 11.5 (p = 0.01) after 6 weeks, and 59.9 ± 11.6 (p = 0.035) when treatment was completed (Figure 3(a)). Similarly, the VAS scores improved from 7.3 ± 1.7 before treatment to 5.9 ± 2.9 (p = 0.044) after 3 weeks, 5.7 ± 3.1 (p = 0.018) after 6 weeks, and 4.8 ± 2.8 (p = 0.011) when treatment was completed. Notably, the VAS scores upon completion of treatment were significantly lower than those after 3 weeks (p = 0.011) (Figure 3(b)).
The GAD-7 (Figure 3(c)), PHQ-9 (Figure 3(d)), and allodynia scale scores obtained after 3 and 6 weeks of treatment were not significantly different from the scores obtained before and upon completion of treatment. There were also no significant changes in the patients’ recorded use of acute therapy agents during the treatment period or in prophylactic treatment.
4. Discussion
This is the first study to verify the efficacy and safety of percutaneous craniocervical OST applied to multiple sites on the face, head, and neck to treat drug-resistant CM. The overall result of the study was that the patients’ migraine symptoms decreased during the 8-week treatment period. Furthermore, OST therapy seems to
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Figure 2. Migraine frequency. Box plots showing distribution of migraine frequency before and after treatment. Whiskers indicate the upper and lower quartiles.
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Figure 3. Clinical course of measurements. Box plots showing distribution of (a) HIT-6, (b) VAS, (c) GAD-7, and (d) PHQ-9 scores before treatment, after 3 and 6 weeks (W) of treatment, and after completion of treatment. Whiskers indicate the upper and lower quartiles.
be effective and well tolerated, it can be combined with drug treatments without risking cumulative adverse effects.
The outcome variables that changed after the start of craniocervical OST were the VAS score, which is an indicator of migraine severity, and the HIT-6 score, which is a quality of life (QOL) indicator related to migraines; both scores improved significantly. However, there was no obvious improvement in the number of migraine days and no significant improvement in the GAD-7 or PHQ-9 scores. We believe that the fact that the VAS and HIT-6 scores improved while the number of migraine days remained unchanged suggests that OST controls pain during attacks, despite having no effect on the cause of migraine, and that pain control improves QOL. Therefore, Patients with high VAS or HIT-6 score should be better treated by OST. We also believe that the absence of improvement in GAD-7 and PHQ-9 scores indicates that OST has no effect on psychological symptoms and that the treatment-based improvement in QOL is not due to psychogenic effects. The effects of noninvasive neurostimulation on migraine were shown in a study in which supraorbital stimulation therapy was used to treat infrequent migraines [7] ; the number of migraine days decreased from 6.9 to 4.9. In another reported study, self-administration of noninvasive vagus nerve stimulation by 20 patients with drug-resistant migraine resulted in a decrease in the number of migraine days from 18 to 12 and improvement in depressive symptoms and sleep quality [16] . The OS used in our present study resulted in improved QOL that was attributed to a decrease in migraine severity. We expect, in the future, to see further improvement in the treatment of severe CM if we change the frequency and intensity settings for OS administration.
The mechanism underlying the effects of OST on CM remains unclear. OST is presumed to exert its effects when the stimulus is applied to the peripheral skin, and the main mechanism is assumed to be an effect on nociceptors located within the fascial tissue and intra- and extracranial muscles. Proposed mechanisms for the progression from sporadic migraines to CM include dysfunction of the periaqueductal gray matter that makes up the central descending nociceptive neural network [17] [18] and dysfunction of pain receptors, both due to central sensitization [19] [20] . Animal experiments have shown that the activity of vagal afferents is attenuated by nociceptive neural activity via the spinothalamic and spinoreticular tracts [21] . We presume that the OS applied in our study exerted its pain-modifying effects by passing from the body surface via the vagus nerve, occipital nerve, and trigeminal nerve, following pathways similar to those reported in a study that made concomitant use of percutaneous occipital nerve stimulation and percutaneous orbital stimulation, both of which rely on trigeminal stimulation [22] . Furthermore, we presume that OST also exerts effects on central sites related to chronic conversion of migraines, including the red nucleus, tectum, extrapyramidal system, and pathways descending from the pain matrix [23] [24] , which have been verified both by their effects on the stimulation site and by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and positron emission tomography (PET) studies.
Our findings should be interpreted in light of our study limitations. Only a small number of patients were included, and the study was not conducted as a randomized controlled trial. In addition, uniformity of the procedures between centers was not formally verified. Further, OS was applied at numerous sites on the face, head, and neck. The sites at which OS is particularly effective remain to be identified so that the number can be reduced for optimum clinical application and so that the therapeutic mechanism can be elucidated.
5. Conclusion
In conclusion, our data suggest that OS is well tolerated and may become a feasible form of treatment for drug-resistant CM. Further investigations are needed, however, for OST as treatment for refractory CM to become a clinical reality.
Acknowledgements
We also thank Tina Tajima, professor of the Research Institute of Medical Education, St. Marianna University School of Medicine for meticulous English editing.