Migraines' secondary characteristics are inconsistent. Triggers precipitating a particular episode of migraine vary widely. The efficacy of the simplest treatment, applying warmth or coolness to the affected area of the head, varies between persons, sometimes worsening the migraine. A particular migraine rescue drug may sometimes work and sometimes not work in the same patient. Some migraine types don't have pain or may manifest symptoms in parts of the body other than the head.
Available evidence suggests that migraine pain is one symptom of several to many disorders of the serotonergic control system, a dual hormone-neurotransmitter with numerous types of receptors. Two disorders — classic migraine with aura (MA, STG) and common migraine without aura (MO, STG) — have been shown to have a genetic factor. Studies on twins show that genes have a 60 to 65% influence on the development of migraine (PMID 10496258 and PMID 10204850 ). Additional migraine types are suspected and could be proven to be genetic. Migraine understood as several or many disorders could explain the inconsistencies, especially if a single patient has more than one genetic type.
However, still other migraine types might
be functionally acquired due to hormone organ disease or injury. Three quarters
of adult migraine patients are female, although pre-pubertal migraine affects
approximately equal numbers of boys and girls. This reveals the strong correlation
to hormonal cycling and hormonal-related causes or triggers. Hormonal migraine
is a likely consequence of periodically falling hormone levels causing reduction
in protein biosynthesis of metabolic components including intestinal tract
serotonin.(1)
source
(1) wikipedia