Red wine as a cause of migraine

Patients with migraine who believed that red wine but not alcohol in general had a headache-provoking effect on them were challenged either with red wine or with a vodka and diluent mixture of equivalent alcohol content, both consumed cold out of dark bottles to disguise colour and flavour. The red...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Lancet (British edition) 1988-03, Vol.1 (8585), p.558-559
Hauptverfasser: LITTLEWOOD, J. T, GIBB, C, GLOVER, V, ANDLER, M, DAVIES, P. T, ROSE, F. C
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Patients with migraine who believed that red wine but not alcohol in general had a headache-provoking effect on them were challenged either with red wine or with a vodka and diluent mixture of equivalent alcohol content, both consumed cold out of dark bottles to disguise colour and flavour. The red wine, which had a negligible tyramine content, provoked a typical migraine attack in 9 of 11 such patients, whereas none of the 8 challenged with vodka had an attack. Neither red wine nor vodka provoked such episodes in other migrainous subjects or controls. These findings show that red wine contains a migraine-provoking agent that is neither alcohol nor tyramine.
ISSN:0140-6736
1474-547X