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- Cynthia W Karlson, Catrina C Litzenburg, Marilyn L Sampilo, Michael A Rapoff, Mark Connelly, Jennifer L Bickel, Andrew D Hershey, and Scott W Powers.
- Department of Pediatrics, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, MS, USA.
- Headache. 2013 Nov 1;53(10):1624-34.
BackgroundRetrospective and cross-sectional studies have suggested a bidirectional relationship between migraine and mood disturbance.ObjectiveThe present prospective daily diary study examined the prevalence and temporal associations between migraine and daily mood, mood and next-day headache, and headache and next-day mood.MethodsSixty-nine children (50 females, 19 males) between the ages of 7 and 12 years and their parents attending neurology clinic appointments and having a diagnosis of migraine as defined by International Headache Classification 2nd edition criteria completed measures on the quality of life, headache disability, child emotions, and child behaviors. Children and parents then recorded children's headache occurrence, headache duration, headache severity, mood, daily hassles, and medication use on paper diaries once a day for 2 consecutive weeks. "Mood" was defined using the Facial Affective Scale, which is a visual representation of negative and positive affect. Data were analyzed using multilevel models.ResultsControlling for age, sex, quality of life, headache disability, and medication use, worse mood was associated with same-day occurrence, longer duration, and more severe headache in both child and parent report. Today's mood was not consistently associated with next-day headache, and today's headache was not associated with next-day mood in either child or parent report.ConclusionsResults of this study lend support to a complex relationship between mood and headache in children with migraine. More research is needed to further elucidate the temporal nature of this relationship within a given day and over an extended period of time.© 2013 American Headache Society.
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