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Headache Syndromes Amongst Schoolchildren in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
58
Citations
15
References
2002
Year
Cluster HeadacheSaudi ArabiaPediatricsRecurrent Headache EpisodesNeurologyPrevalenceMedicineRecurrent EpisodesSaudi ChildrenEpidemiologyChild Development
We evaluated 1,400 randomly selected Saudi children in grades 1 through 9 to determine the prevalence of migraine and tension-type headache. Of the 1400 distributed questionnaires, 1,181 (84.3%) were completed properly and so served as the basis for analysis. There were 573 boys (48.5%) and 608 girls (51.5%). Ages ranged from 6 to 18 years. Five hundred eighty-eight children (49.8%; 272 boys and 316 girls) had recurrent headache episodes not related to febrile illness in the year preceding the survey. Eighty-four children (7.1%; 37 boys and 47 girls) had recurrent episodes of migraine, and 504 (42.7%; 232 boys and 272 girls) had recurrent episodes of nonmigraine headache. For both boys and girls, the age-specific prevalence rate for nonmigraine headache rose steadily from around 15% at aged 6 to 7 years to nearly 60% after aged 15. For migraine, there was a sharp increase in the prevalence rate (from around 2% to around 9%) at aged 10 to 11, also in both boys and girls. Age-adjusted prevalence for migraine between aged 6 and 15 was 6.2%. Due to the relatively poor sensitivity of some of the IHS criteria in children, this figure may underestimate the true magnitude of migraine in the population studied.
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