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Journal Article

Citation

Bekkelund SI, Salvesen R. Headache 2003; 43(1): 59-62.

Affiliation

Department of Neurology, Tromsø University Hospital and University of Tromsø, Norway.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, American Headache Society; American Association for the Study of Headache, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

12864760

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To test whether chronic headache (>3 days/week) is more prevalent than episodic headache (<3 days/week) in patients with a previous history of significant head trauma. METHOD: We included 903 consecutive patients referred to a specialist center for headache during a period of 2 years. As the main parameter, we selected self-reported history of previous significant head trauma defined as loss of consciousness or hospitalization due to head trauma. RESULTS: One hundred eighty-nine out of 903 patients with difficult headache referred to a neurologist had a previous history of head trauma (21%). We identified 297 patients with headache 3 days or more per week (33%). Of these patients with chronic headache, 68 (23%) reported previous significant head trauma compared with 121/714 (17%) in other patients with headache (P =.18). Shorter length of education was associated with chronic headache; however, age, sex, or specific headache syndromes such as migraine or tension headache were not related to chronicity. CONCLUSION: Although the incidence of previous head trauma was prevalent in this highly selected group of patients with headache, such a history was not a predictor of chronicity.


Language: en

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