Effectiveness of yoga therapy for migraine treatment: A meta-analysis of randomized controlled studies.

Published
June 07, 2022
Journal
The American journal of emergency medicine
PICOID
82bfbee7
DOI
Citations
9
Keywords
Migraine, Pain intensity, Randomized controlled trials, Yoga therapy
Copyright
Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier Inc.
Patients/Population/Participants

migraine patients

Intervention

yoga therapy

Comparison

control group

Outcome

pain intensity, headache frequency, headache duration, HIT-6 score, MIDAS score

Abstract

P
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Yoga therapy may have some potential in treating migraine, and thus this meta-analysis aims to explore the efficacy of yoga therapy for patients with migraine. PubMed, EMbase, Web of science, EBSCO and Cochrane library databases have been systematically searched and we included the randomized controlled trials (RCTs) reporting the efficacy of yoga therapy for migraine patients. The outcomes included. This meta-analysis included six RCTs. The results revealed that compared with control group for migraine, yoga therapy was associated with remarkably decreased pain intensity (SMD = -1.21; 95% CI = -2.17 to -0.25; P = 0.01), headache frequency (SMD = -1.43; 95% CI = -2.23 to -0.64; P = 0.0004), headache duration (SMD = -1.03; 95% CI = -1.85 to -0.21; P = 0.01), HIT-6 score (SMD = -2.28; 95% CI = -3.81 to -0.75; P = 0.003) and MIDAS score (SMD = -0.52; 95% CI = -0.77 to -0.27; P < 0.0001). Yoga therapy may be effective to treat migraine patients, but it should be recommended with caution because of heterogeneity.

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