Conference Coverage

Moving more, sitting less vital for migraine patients


 

FROM AHS 2021

Encouraging patients to exercise

Since the benefits of physical activity and limiting sedentary time outweigh the potential harms, “some physical activity is better than none,” Dr. Bond said. To help patients begin increasing their physical activity, he recommended advising them to start with small amounts and then gradually increase frequency, intensity, and duration over time.

Dr. Robblee follows a similar approach, taking into account each patient’s particular circumstances and any medications they’re taking, including the side effects of those medications.

“It’s about starting where they are,” Dr. Robblee said. “Some patients, despite having severe migraine, have built themselves up so they’re doing exercise three or four times per week, or every day, and I have other people who never exercise,” she said. “For those patients who are very sedentary, if I can get them to start with 5 minutes per week so they have that sense of accomplishment, then that’s where I start. Then slowly build it up over time. Like most things in the migraine world, I individualize it for the person.”

Dr. Bond offered the following specific tips to clinicians in educating and encouraging patients to increase physical activity:

  • Educate patients regarding the short-and long-term benefits of moving more and sitting less, both for their migraines and for overall health.
  • Correct misconceptions about the negative effects of physical activity as it relates to migraines.
  • Personalize the rationale for physical activity to that patient’s specific values and personal goals.
  • Encourage patients to use an activity tracker, both for tracking physical activity and sedentary time, and to monitor migraine attacks, stress, energy levels, and fatigue on days they do and do not exercise.
  • Help patients set goals for eventually meeting MVPA recommendations and interrupting prolonged periods of sitting with brief movement breaks.
  • Help patients identify rewards for meeting goals that are tied to the activity, such as new exercise clothing.
  • Encourage patients to identify a consistent time for physical activity each day to establish a habit, “ideally in the morning before barriers and life get in the way,” he said.

Eventually, physical activity itself should become intrinsically rewarding, Dr. Bond said.

“To limit sitting and encourage more movement throughout the day, we want to make the choice to engage in physical activity easier by adding environmental cues that encourage physical activity,” he said. “Conversely, we want to make the choice to engage in sedentary behavior more difficult by increasing the amount of effort that is required to engage in these behaviors.”

Dr. Robblee found Dr. Bond’s emphasis on sitting less – distinct from moving more – a helpful frame to consider with her patients. “I really like the approach of looking at it from that approach: in addition to how do we get you up and moving, how much time are you sitting, and how often can you break that up into smaller increments so that you’re up more often?” Dr. Robblee said. “That sometimes sounds less scary than ‘let’s get you exercising.’ So ‘let’s get you sitting a little bit less.’ I think that is something I might start to adopt.”

No external funding was noted. Dr. Robblee is a principal investigator for a study sponsored by Eli Lilly and receives stipends for MedLink Neurology and Neurodiem. Dr. Bond reported no disclosures.

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