Publication | Closed Access
Prevalence of Secondary Chronic Headaches in a Population-Based Sample of 30-44-Year-Old Persons. The Akershus Study of Chronic Headache
160
Citations
41
References
2008
Year
Cluster HeadacheChronic HeadachePain DisordersAkershus StudyPain SyndromePsychiatrySecondary Chronic HeadachesMedicineSecondary Chronic HeadacheClinical EpidemiologyRehabilitationNeurologyPrevalenceNeck DisorderNeuropathologyStroke
We studied secondary chronic headaches (> or = 15 days/month for at least 3 months) in a random sample of 30 000 persons aged 30-44 years. They received a mailed questionnaire. Those with self-reported chronic headache within the last month and/or year were invited to an interview and examination by a neurological resident. The criteria of the International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD-II) were applied. The questionnaire response rate was 71%, and the participation rate of the interview was 74%. Of the 633 participants, 298 had a secondary chronic headache. The 1-year prevalence of secondary chronic headache was 2.14%, i.e. chronic posttraumatic headache 0.21%, chronic headache attributed to whiplash injury 0.17%, post-craniotomy headache 0.02%, medication-overuse headache (MOH) 1.72%, cervicogenic headache 0.17%, headache attributed to chronic rhinosinusitis 0.33% and miscellaneous headaches 0.04%. The majority of those with ICHD-II-defined secondary chronic headache had MOH, while about one-third had other secondary headaches often in combination with MOH.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1