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Mixed Migraine and Tension-type: A Common Cause of Recurrent Headache in Children
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2014
Abstract
Determine relative frequency of recurrent headache (HA) types in children and adolescents referred to a pediatric neurologist. Methods and subjects: Study design: Prospective, sequential, and observational. Setting: Private practice Pediatric Neurology Clinic in a Canadian city (Winnipeg). Patients and data collection: Information on those referred with HA between September 1998 and December 2001 was entered on data sheets. Patients were followed up for one month to four years.
Three hundred and twenty (69%) of 463 referred with HAhad recurrent HA. There were 172 males (54%) and 148 (46%) females. Their ages ranged from two years to 19 years (median: 11 years). They had had their HA disorder for one month to 14 years (median: two years) prior to assessment. Migraine was the main HA type in 124 (38%), tension-type headache (TTH) in 57 (18%) and mixed migraine and TTH in 101 (32%). Thus, 101 (45%) of 225 with migraine as one HAtype also had TTH.
Tension-type headache and migraine frequently co-exist and may represent a distinct headache type, at least in children; the association will likely influence response of affected children and adolescents to specific migraine treatments in clinical trials or practice.
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- Copyright © The Canadian Journal of Neurological 2004
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