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Abstract

–  Stratify care by choosing the optimal medication for a migraine. Severe pain, significant disability, and associated features such as nausea or vomiting necessitate early treatment with specific, high efficacy therapy.
–  Migraine patients may have a spectrum of headache presentations ranging from tension-type headaches to migraine headaches with or without aura. Mild headache types may respond to simple analgesics, though there is evidence that migraineurs will respond to migraine-specific medications such as the triptans for a range of headache phenotypes.
–  Physicians should provide patients with medication to treat nausea and vomiting. They may be infrequent accompaniments, but medication such as a neuroleptic may avoid a trip to the emergency room.
–  Provide rescue medication for an occasional failure of usual treatment to avoid further disability or emergency room visits.
–  Avoid medication overuse by matching treatment to patient needs. A cycle of repetitive and escalating medication use can lead to transformation of migraine into chronic daily headache with analgesic-dependent rebound.

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