Ocular Migraine:
Ocular migraines are described as abnormal visual sensations. People with a history of classic migraines are most often fall its prey. Head pain sometimes follows ocular migraines.
Abdominal Migraine:
Abdominal migraine is observed mainly in children with the children ages 5 to 9 years old its most common victims. However, adults can also get affected by abdominal migraine. Vomiting, nausea, and abdominal pain are the conditions that primarily manifest abdominal migraine. It was not until links were made to other family members having migraines and children who had it grew into adults with migraine with and without aura that abdominal migraine was acknowledged as a form of migraine.
Basilar Migraine:
In 1961, Bickerstaff described basilar migraine as a rare variant of migraine affecting young women and girls and bearing a strong relationship with menses. Also known as basilar artery migraine, Bickerstaff’s migraine, and syncopal migraine, basilar migraine is also grouped by migraine literature with ophthalmoplegic and hemiplegic migraine under the heading of ‘complicated migraines.’
Hemiplegic Migraine:
First we have to understand that migraine attacks are episodic manifestations of a genetic neurological disease before we can understand hemiplegic migraine. A rare form of migraine disease, which can present in a variety of ways, hemiplegic migraine is more confusing by its being of two types: Sporadic Hemiplegic Migraine (SHM) and Familiar Hemiplegic Migraine (FHM).
Nocturnal Migraine:
During the late night or early morning hours, most commonly around 4:00 A.M., may patients who have migraine will suffer their attacks. This is known as nocturnal migraine often awakens the patient. |