5. Is there a treatment for acephalgic migraine?
Common Questions About Acephalgic Migrain
4. How long does acephalgic migraine last?
3. What does an acephalgic migraine attack feel like?
2. Do I need to see a healthcare provider if I have
acephalgic migraine?
1. What is acephalgic migraine?
1. What is acephalgic migraine?
2. Do I need to see a healthcare provider if I have
acephalgic migraine?
3. What does an acephalgic migraine attack feel like?
4. How long does acephalgic migraine last?
5. Is there a treatment for acephalgic migraine?
Common Questions About Acephalgic Migraine

Next Question
Acephalgic migraine is a migraine attack without head pain. It can be a migraine attack with aura and no head pain; an abdominal migraine attack with nausea, vomiting, and stomach pain; or a vestibular migraine attack with dizziness and vertigo. The key to the definition is no head pain.
1. What is acephalgic migraine?
2. What are common symptoms of
the aura phase, and how long
does it last?
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Common Questions About Acephalgic Migrain
Common Questions About Acephalgic Migraine

Next Question
It depends on your migraine type. If you have migraine aura without headache then you have visual, sensory, and language symptoms. Abdominal migraine presents with nausea, vomiting, and stomach pain. Vestibular migraine comes with dizziness and vertigo.
3. What does an acephalgic migraine attack feel like?
1. What are common symptoms of the prodrome phase, and how long does it last?
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Common Questions About Acephalgic Migrain
Common Questions About Acephalgic Migraine

Next Question
Migraine aura without headache lasts 30 minutes to an hour. Abdominal or vestibular migraine attacks last the same amount of time as a typical migraine attack which is 4 - 72 hours without treatment.
4. What does the prodrome phase, or “migraine hangover,” feel
like?
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4. How long does acephalgic migraine last?
Common Questions About Acephalgic Migrain
Common Questions About Acephalgic Migraine

All Questions
Treatment is not usually needed for migraine aura without head pain.
Migraine-specific treatments, like triptans, work for abdominal migraine and
it is typically more effective to take them in a non-oral form, like an injection, nasal spray, or orally disintegrating tablet, given the abdominal symptoms
with this type of migraine.
5. Is there a treatment for acephalgic migraine?
3. What does the headache phase
of a migraine attack feel like,
and how long does it last?
Next Question
Common Questions About Acephalgic Migrain
Common Questions About Acephalgic Migraine
