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Purpose of review Caffeine is known to have both beneficial and adverse effects in individuals with headache disorders. This review describes recent findings regarding caffeine that are relevant to headache disorders and puts these findings into the context of clinical management. Recent findings Preclinical studies show that caffeine has complex effects on sleep, brain blood flow, and intracranial pressure that may depend on the timing of caffeine intake relative to the sleep-wake cycle. Caffeine metabolism may have significant inter-individual variation that influences its therapeutic and/or adverse effects. Caffeine has acute therapeutic benefit for some primary headache disorders. For migraine, this benefit is predominantly in milder headache without cutaneous allodynia. High levels of caffeine intake may contribute to progression of headache disorders. Caffeine-containing combination analgesics commonly cause medication overuse headache. Abrupt reduction in caffeine consumption is a trigger for migraine that may be important in situations including the hospital setting, religious and cultural fasting, and pregnancy. Summary There is not sufficient evidence to support universal guidelines for the use of dietary and medicinal caffeine in headache disorders. A sensible approach based upon available evidence is to limit dietary caffeine intake to moderate amounts with consistent timing before noon, and to use caffeine-containing combination analgesics infrequently for milder headache.
Purpose of review Caffeine is known to have both beneficial and adverse effects in individuals with headache disorders. This review describes recent findings regarding caffeine that are relevant to headache disorders and puts these findings into the context of clinical management. Recent findings Preclinical studies show that caffeine has complex effects on sleep, brain blood flow, and intracranial pressure that may depend on the timing of caffeine intake relative to the sleep-wake cycle. Caffeine metabolism may have significant inter-individual variation that influences its therapeutic and/or adverse effects. Caffeine has acute therapeutic benefit for some primary headache disorders. For migraine, this benefit is predominantly in milder headache without cutaneous allodynia. High levels of caffeine intake may contribute to progression of headache disorders. Caffeine-containing combination analgesics commonly cause medication overuse headache. Abrupt reduction in caffeine consumption is a trigger for migraine that may be important in situations including the hospital setting, religious and cultural fasting, and pregnancy. Summary There is not sufficient evidence to support universal guidelines for the use of dietary and medicinal caffeine in headache disorders. A sensible approach based upon available evidence is to limit dietary caffeine intake to moderate amounts with consistent timing before noon, and to use caffeine-containing combination analgesics infrequently for milder headache.
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