Overview
Acute nontraumatic headache is a common reason people seek emergency care. In the emergency department, clinicians must quickly relieve pain while also considering serious causes such as stroke, meningitis, or intracranial bleeding. Most headaches seen in this setting are ultimately primary headaches, such as migraine or tension-type headache, but effective and fast symptom control remains important for patient comfort and throughput.
A recent randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial evaluated whether adding intravenous magnesium sulfate to oral paracetamol could improve outcomes in adults with acute nontraumatic headache. The study asked a practical emergency medicine question: does magnesium provide meaningful extra pain relief when given alongside a standard analgesic?
Why magnesium was studied
Magnesium plays an important role in nerve signaling, muscle function, and pain modulation. It is also thought to influence pathways involved in migraine, including N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor activity and vascular tone. Because of these properties, intravenous magnesium sulfate has been explored as a potential treatment for headache, especially migraine.
Paracetamol, also known as acetaminophen, is widely used for pain and fever and is commonly available in emergency departments. The study examined whether magnesium sulfate could add benefit on top of paracetamol, rather than being used alone.
Study design
This trial enrolled adults who presented to the emergency department with acute nontraumatic headache. Before randomization, all participants received 1 g of oral paracetamol. They were then assigned to one of two groups:
1. Magnesium group: 2 g intravenous magnesium sulfate diluted in 150 mL saline solution
2. Placebo group: 150 mL saline solution alone
The infusion was given over more than 30 minutes. Both the patients and the clinicians assessing outcomes were blinded to group assignment, which helps reduce bias.
The main outcome was treatment success, defined as at least a 30% reduction in pain score on a numerical rating scale at 30 minutes. Secondary outcomes included need for rescue analgesia, patient satisfaction, and adverse events.
Key results
A total of 506 patients were included in the magnesium group and 522 in the placebo group. Treatment success occurred more often in the magnesium group:
– 78.9% with magnesium sulfate
– 65.1% with placebo
– Absolute difference: 13.8%
– 95% confidence interval: 8 to 19
This means that more patients reported a meaningful early reduction in pain when magnesium was added. However, the measured differences in timed pain scores were all below the 1.3-point threshold considered clinically important. In other words, while the success rate improved, the size of the pain reduction may not have been large enough to matter greatly to most patients.
Other outcomes also favored magnesium:
– Rescue analgesia was needed less often: 7.1% versus 15.3%
– Difference: -8.2%
– 95% confidence interval: -12 to -4.3
– Patient satisfaction was higher: 91.7% versus 85.1%
– Difference: 6.6%
– 95% confidence interval: 2.7 to 10
– Adverse events were more frequent: 15.4% versus 11.1%
– Difference: 4.3%
– 95% confidence interval: 0.1 to 8.4
The side effects were described as mild, which is consistent with the known safety profile of magnesium sulfate when used appropriately. Common magnesium-related adverse effects can include flushing, warmth, nausea, dizziness, or a feeling of heaviness. More serious toxicity is uncommon at standard doses but can occur if kidney function is poor or if dosing is excessive.
Interpretation of the findings
This study suggests that intravenous magnesium sulfate can increase the chance of early treatment success when added to paracetamol for acute nontraumatic headache in the emergency department. However, the magnitude of benefit appears modest. The trial authors noted that although the primary endpoint improved, the differences in actual pain score reductions did not reach the threshold generally accepted as clinically important.
That distinction matters. Statistical significance means the result is unlikely to be due to chance, but clinical significance asks whether patients are likely to feel a meaningful improvement. In this study, magnesium appeared to help some patients, but the average pain relief was not dramatically larger than with placebo.
The reduction in rescue analgesia is clinically relevant. If fewer patients need additional pain medication, this may simplify management, reduce exposure to other drugs, and improve emergency department efficiency. On the other hand, the higher rate of mild adverse events means magnesium is not entirely side-effect free.
What this means for emergency care
For emergency clinicians, this trial adds to the evidence base for headache treatment. Intravenous magnesium sulfate may be considered as an adjunct option, especially when standard therapies alone are insufficient or when clinicians want to reduce the need for rescue medication.
Still, the results do not support magnesium sulfate as a dramatic breakthrough therapy for acute headache. Its role appears to be supportive rather than definitive. In practice, treatment decisions should continue to be guided by the headache type, severity, associated symptoms, medical history, contraindications, and local protocols.
Common emergency department approaches to acute nontraumatic headache may include:
– Oral or intravenous acetaminophen/paracetamol
– Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
– Antiemetics, especially for migraine-associated nausea
– Triptans in selected patients with migraine
– Fluids when dehydration is present
– Magnesium sulfate in selected cases, based on clinician judgment
Before treating a headache as benign, clinicians must also assess for red flags such as sudden thunderclap onset, fever, neck stiffness, altered mental status, neurologic deficits, pregnancy, head trauma, cancer, immunosuppression, or a new headache pattern in an older patient.
Strengths and limitations
This trial has several strengths. It was randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled, which are strong methods for evaluating a treatment. It also included a large number of patients, improving the reliability of the findings.
However, some limitations should be kept in mind. The study focused on acute nontraumatic headache as a broad category, so the results may not apply equally to all headache subtypes. For example, migraine, tension-type headache, and other primary headaches may respond differently to magnesium.
Another important point is that the clinical relevance of the pain score changes was limited. Even though the response rate improved, the actual reduction in pain intensity was below the accepted threshold for meaningful benefit. This suggests that the medication may help some patients, but the average effect is not large.
Finally, the trial used a single infusion regimen. Different doses, infusion speeds, or patient selection criteria might produce different results, but those questions remain unanswered.
Practical takeaways
The main takeaways from this study are straightforward:
– Intravenous magnesium sulfate increased the proportion of patients who achieved early treatment success.
– The actual pain relief was modest and below the usual threshold for strong clinical importance.
– Fewer patients needed rescue analgesia when magnesium was added.
– Patient satisfaction improved slightly.
– Mild adverse events were somewhat more common with magnesium.
For clinicians, magnesium sulfate may be a reasonable adjunct in selected patients with acute nontraumatic headache, particularly when a low-risk add-on therapy is desired. For patients, the study suggests that magnesium may help, but it is not a guaranteed or major pain-relief solution.
Conclusion
In adults with acute nontraumatic headache seen in the emergency department, adding intravenous magnesium sulfate to oral paracetamol led to more frequent treatment success and less need for rescue medication. However, the size of the pain relief was modest and below commonly accepted thresholds for clinical importance. The treatment was associated with a small increase in mild side effects.
Overall, magnesium sulfate appears to be a potentially useful adjunct rather than a stand-alone answer for acute headache pain in emergency care.

