Migraine is a chronic disease, and some people think that headache is just a minor disease and not to worry too much. There is no direct connection between migraine and life expectancy. For mild headache, the symptoms will generally be reduced or stop after medication, but if it is a long-term headache and oral medication has not been good, it is likely to evolve into intractable migraine, which has clear pain points and intermittent periods, and the symptoms can generally be relieved on their own during the intermittent period, but the attacks are very intense. According to the survey, migraine patients are twice as likely to have a cerebral infarction as the average person, and may also have a combined cerebral hemorrhage, which can be very dangerous and potentially fatal in the event of intracranial hemorrhage. There is no direct connection between migraine and life expectancy, but migraine can affect people’s life and work, and most directly affect sleep, so some patients have a heavy psychological burden and are prone to depression. Patients with migraine are advised to take treatment measures early after they have headache symptoms to stop the further development of the disease.