Researchers think that they finally know why we get migraines

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Migraine

Gonzalo Malpartida/Flickr

A woman lays on her couch, debilitated from an ongoing migraine.

Migraines are a beast, and one in 7 people in the world suffer from them regularly. Until now, doctors haven't really known what causes them.

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But, a new study published by the International Headache Genetics Consortium (IHGC) found that these awful headaches are probably caused by vascular and muscular problems.

In other words, their cause has to do with how well blood is supplied throughout the body.

This study involved 59,674 migraine patients and 316,078 people that don't get migraines. Its findings build on previous work that scanned the DNA (or genomes) of migraine patients, finding 13 independent loci (small differences in DNA) that are associated with migraines.

In these new results, the study authors found 38 distinct loci in migraine patients' genomes that were associated with migraine risk. After doing some research on these loci, the team found that they affected vascular and smooth muscle tissue. It was this discovery that suggested that migraines are probably due to problems with blood supply.

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While more work is still to be done, the researchers think that their findings could be the start of personalized treatments for the disease - a necessary step to help patients suffering from these debilitating headaches, which are the third most prevalent illness in the world.

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