MILES ATKINSON, M.D., F.R.C.S.(ENG.)
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In a previous paper, it was shown that headache possessing all the characteristics of migraine is not uncommonly associated with Menière's syndrome,1 a fact which was pointed out originally by Menière himself. Sometimes the migraine attacks subside some years before the onset of the Menière attacks, sometimes they are replaced by the Menière attacks, and sometimes the two are present together. It was stated that, in the opinion of the writer, the vascular mechanism producing the two syndromes is identical, and the observations on which this opinion was based were discussed. It was also shown that the treatment directed towards
ATKINSON M. MIGRAINE HEADACHE: SOME CLINICAL OBSERVATIONS ON THE VASCULAR MECHANISM AND ITS CONTROL1. Ann Intern Med. ;21:990–997. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-21-6-990
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© 2019
Published: Ann Intern Med. 1944;21(6):990-997.
DOI: 10.7326/0003-4819-21-6-990
Headache, Neurology.
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