• Headache · Sep 2010

    Chronic headache and comorbidities: a two-phase, population-based, cross-sectional study.

    • Ariovaldo da Silva, Esther Coelho Costa, João Bosco Gomes, Frederico Motta Leite, Rodrigo Santiago Gomez, Luiz Paulo Vasconcelos, Abouch Krymchantowski, Pedro Moreira, and Antonio Lucio Teixeira.
    • UFMG - Headache Clinic, Belo Horizonte, Brazil.
    • Headache. 2010 Sep 1; 50 (8): 1306-12.

    BackgroundStudies using resources of a public family health program to estimate the prevalence of chronic daily headaches (CDH) are lacking.ObjectivesTo estimate the 1-year prevalence of CDH, as well as the presence of associated psychiatric and temporomandibular disorders (TMD) comorbidities, on the entire population of a city representative of the rural area of Brazil.MethodsThis was a cross-sectional, population-based, 2-phase study. In the first phase, health agents interviewed all individuals older than 10 years, in a rural area of Brazil. In the second stage, all individuals who reported headaches on 4 or more days per week were then evaluated by a multidisciplinary team. CDH were classified according to the second edition of the International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD-2). Medication overuse headache was diagnosed, as per the ICHD-2, after detoxification trials. Psychiatric comorbidities and TMD were diagnosed based on the DSM-IV and on the Research Diagnostic Criteria for Temporomandibular Disorders criteria, respectively.ResultsA total of 1631 subjects participated in the direct interviews. Of them, 57 (3.6%) had CDH. Chronic migraine was the most common of the CDH (21, 36.8%). Chronic tension-type headache (10, 17.5%), medication overuse headache (13, 22.8%) and probable medication overuse headache (10, 17.5%) were also common. Psychiatric disorders were observed in 38 (67.3%) of the CDH subjects. TMD were seen in 33 (58.1)% of them.ConclusionsThe prevalence of CDH in the rural area of Brazil is similar to what has been reported in previous studies. A significant proportion of them have psychiatric comorbidities and/or TMD. In this sample, comorbidities were as frequent as reported in convenience samples from tertiary headache centers.

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