- The specific symptoms for this type of migraine include double vision, droopy eyelids, paralyzed eyes, vision changes and severe head pain.
- Oculomotor or ophthalmoplegic migraines are rare; it is important for a doctor to confirm the diagnosis, because there are other medical conditions that can cause similar symptoms.
- This type of migraine was first recognized in the mid-1880s.
- In general, changes in blood flow in the head are believed to cause migraines. Doctors suggest that when the blood vessels around the eye become inflamed, oculomotor migraines occur.
- Oculomotor migraines are not contagious; a person can't "catch it" from another person.











