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The Author(s) 2013

Abstract

We evaluated risk factors associated with chronic headache (CH) such as age, gender, smoking, frequent drinking of alcoholic beverages (drinking), obesity, education and frequent intake of acute pain drugs to test their usefulness in clinical differentiation between chronic migraine (CM) and chronic tension-type headache (CTTH).

We used baseline data from the population-based German Headache Consortium Study including 9,944 participants aged 18-65 years, screened 2003-2005, using validated questionnaires. CM and CTTH were defined according to IHS criteria. Multinominal logistic regression analyses were used to investigate the association of CM or CTTH with risk factors by estimating odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (95%CI).

The prevalence of CH was 2.6% (N = 255, mean age 46 ± 14.1 years, 65.1% women), CM 1.1% (N = 108, 45 ± 12.9 years, 73.1%), CTTH 0.5% (N = 50, 49 ± 13.9 years, 48.0%). Participants with CM compared to CTTH were more likely to be female (OR: 2.34, 95%CI: 1.00-5.49) and less likely to drink alcohol (0.31, 0.09-1.04). By trend they seemed more likely to smoke (1.81, 0.76-4.34), to be obese (1.85, 0.54-6.27), to report frequent intake of acute pain drugs (1.68, 0.73-3.88) and less likely to be low educated (0.72, 0.27-1.97).

We concluded that the careful assessment of different risk factors might aid in the clinical differentiation between CM and CTTH.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Epidemiological profiles of patients with chronic migraine and chronic tension-type headache
Author
Schramm, Sara H; Obermann, Mark; Katsarava, Zaza; Diener, Hans-christoph; Moebus, Susanne; Yoon, Min-suk
Pages
40
Publication year
2013
Publication date
May 2013
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
11292369
e-ISSN
11292377
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1355115752
Copyright
The Author(s) 2013