Migraine, as a common chronic neurovascular disease, has a long history and has been recorded in medical books in China 2500 years ago. The disease is characterized by recurrent attacks, throbbing headaches, and headaches on the lateral side, usually lasting 4 to 72 hours. Migraines usually start in childhood and adolescence, with peak incidence in middle-aged and young adults, and are more common in women. Doctors point out that after a lot of clinical data research, the main cause of migraine in most migraine patients, especially those with intractable migraine, is the direct or indirect compression of the nerves by the blood vessels on their scalp. Therefore, the purpose of treatment can be achieved by releasing the compression of blood vessels on nerves through minimally invasive vascular decompression under the microscope. Of course, not all migraine patients need surgery, and minimally invasive surgery is not suitable for patients with short duration, mild to moderate, controllable medications, and patients with unclear pain sites. So, which patients are suitable for microvascular decompression? It is said that patients with migraine whose medication is ineffective or who have serious side effects or drug dependence after taking medication for a long period of time; patients who have a clear pain site; patients whose pain temporarily relieves or disappears after performing drug closure test during pain attack; patients with migraine whose pain is episodic, with obvious intermittent throbbing pain or distension, pins and needles and fire-like pain can determine the pain site through nerve block test and perform microvascular decompression Treatment. Learn about the people for whom migraine surgery is intended. What is the approximate cost of microvascular decompression for migraine? Migraine surgery is a routine minimally invasive neurosurgical procedure with minimal trauma, short hospitalization period, and low cost of surgical treatment, usually around $10,000 to $20,000.