The Effect of Ambient Temperature on Migraine Disease: A Scoping Review
ABSTRACT Introduction Ambient temperature changes are hypothesized to affect migraine attacks, but few published primary articles assess such hypotheses. The authors examine the current germane literature and suggest further research. Methods A literature search was conducted on September 23, 2023,...
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Wiley
2025-08-01
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| Series: | Brain and Behavior |
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| Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1002/brb3.70708 |
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| author | James Kelbert Joshua A. Tobin |
| author_facet | James Kelbert Joshua A. Tobin |
| author_sort | James Kelbert |
| collection | DOAJ |
| description | ABSTRACT Introduction Ambient temperature changes are hypothesized to affect migraine attacks, but few published primary articles assess such hypotheses. The authors examine the current germane literature and suggest further research. Methods A literature search was conducted on September 23, 2023, in PubMed, Embase, and Scopus using the search terms temperature [ti] AND (headach*[ti] OR migrain*[ti]). Rayyan was utilized for duplicate detection and removal and for abstract screening. Conflicting assessments of records were resolved by consensus, and full text analysis was performed. Data was extracted by hand and tabulated. Results Four studies met the inclusion criteria, with an additional eight found through citation analysis that analyzed tens of thousands of patients with migraine disease overall. Six studies demonstrated an association between temperature or temperature changes and migraine disease. One study identified individuals whose migraine attacks were temperature sensitive, but the association was lost when examining the whole population. The remaining five did not find any significant relationship. Every study examining patients on an individual level found a relationship between temperature and migraine disease. Studies in colder geographic areas had a greater propensity to identify cold as a trigger. Conclusion Current data are conflicting. Temperature may be a migraine disease trigger in a subgroup of people with migraine. Lower temperatures may trigger more migraine attacks in colder climates within a subset of people with migraine. Uncontrollable factors such as air pollution, barometric pressure, and humidity are confounding variables that impede such research. Additional studies could include indoor temperature or thermostat settings during the day and night to further stratify the effects of temperature. |
| format | Article |
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| institution | Kabale University |
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| language | English |
| publishDate | 2025-08-01 |
| publisher | Wiley |
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| series | Brain and Behavior |
| spelling | doaj-art-a5404f3ef0fa4bfc9822ecf41dcdc0202025-08-22T05:16:32ZengWileyBrain and Behavior2162-32792025-08-01158n/an/a10.1002/brb3.70708The Effect of Ambient Temperature on Migraine Disease: A Scoping ReviewJames Kelbert0Joshua A. Tobin1University of Arizona College of Medicine–Phoenix Phoenix Arizona USAUniversity of Arizona College of Medicine–Phoenix Phoenix Arizona USAABSTRACT Introduction Ambient temperature changes are hypothesized to affect migraine attacks, but few published primary articles assess such hypotheses. The authors examine the current germane literature and suggest further research. Methods A literature search was conducted on September 23, 2023, in PubMed, Embase, and Scopus using the search terms temperature [ti] AND (headach*[ti] OR migrain*[ti]). Rayyan was utilized for duplicate detection and removal and for abstract screening. Conflicting assessments of records were resolved by consensus, and full text analysis was performed. Data was extracted by hand and tabulated. Results Four studies met the inclusion criteria, with an additional eight found through citation analysis that analyzed tens of thousands of patients with migraine disease overall. Six studies demonstrated an association between temperature or temperature changes and migraine disease. One study identified individuals whose migraine attacks were temperature sensitive, but the association was lost when examining the whole population. The remaining five did not find any significant relationship. Every study examining patients on an individual level found a relationship between temperature and migraine disease. Studies in colder geographic areas had a greater propensity to identify cold as a trigger. Conclusion Current data are conflicting. Temperature may be a migraine disease trigger in a subgroup of people with migraine. Lower temperatures may trigger more migraine attacks in colder climates within a subset of people with migraine. Uncontrollable factors such as air pollution, barometric pressure, and humidity are confounding variables that impede such research. Additional studies could include indoor temperature or thermostat settings during the day and night to further stratify the effects of temperature.https://doi.org/10.1002/brb3.70708ambient temperaturemigraine diseasemigrainepeople with migraine |
| spellingShingle | James Kelbert Joshua A. Tobin The Effect of Ambient Temperature on Migraine Disease: A Scoping Review Brain and Behavior ambient temperature migraine disease migraine people with migraine |
| title | The Effect of Ambient Temperature on Migraine Disease: A Scoping Review |
| title_full | The Effect of Ambient Temperature on Migraine Disease: A Scoping Review |
| title_fullStr | The Effect of Ambient Temperature on Migraine Disease: A Scoping Review |
| title_full_unstemmed | The Effect of Ambient Temperature on Migraine Disease: A Scoping Review |
| title_short | The Effect of Ambient Temperature on Migraine Disease: A Scoping Review |
| title_sort | effect of ambient temperature on migraine disease a scoping review |
| topic | ambient temperature migraine disease migraine people with migraine |
| url | https://doi.org/10.1002/brb3.70708 |
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