OBJECTIVES: To measure longitudinally headache (HA) after moderate and severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) and to examine potential association with demographic, injury, and psychologic factors. DESIGN: Cohort study. SETTING: Four Veterans Administration rehabilitation facilities (Minneapolis, Palo Alto, Richmond, Tampa) within the Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center. PARTICIPANTS: Consecutive patients (military or veteran beneficiaries) with moderate or severe TBI (N=109) who during acute rehabilitation consented to data collection and who completed 6- and 12-month follow-up evaluations. INTERVENTIONS: Not applicable. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: HA frequency, location, type, and incapacitation levels measured during prospective neurologic assessments. RESULTS: Nearly 38% (41/109) of patients had acute posttraumatic headache (PTHA) symptoms; most often in a frontal location (20/41), most often of daily frequency (31/41), and showing no relation to injury severity, emotional, or demographic variables. Postacutely, PTHA symptom severity declined within the group. Better individual improvement was associated with less anxiety and depression at 6-month follow-up. Almost all subjects (21/22) with PTHA symptoms that persisted into the 6-month follow-up period reported symptoms again at 12-month follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: PTHA severity in this sample of persons with moderate and severe TBI showed a pattern of improvement that leveled off by 6 months posthospitalization.
OBJECTIVES: To measure longitudinally headache (HA) after moderate and severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) and to examine potential association with demographic, injury, and psychologic factors. DESIGN: Cohort study. SETTING: Four Veterans Administration rehabilitation facilities (Minneapolis, Palo Alto, Richmond, Tampa) within the Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center. PARTICIPANTS: Consecutive patients (military or veteran beneficiaries) with moderate or severe TBI (N=109) who during acute rehabilitation consented to data collection and who completed 6- and 12-month follow-up evaluations. INTERVENTIONS: Not applicable. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: HA frequency, location, type, and incapacitation levels measured during prospective neurologic assessments. RESULTS: Nearly 38% (41/109) of patients had acute posttraumatic headache (PTHA) symptoms; most often in a frontal location (20/41), most often of daily frequency (31/41), and showing no relation to injury severity, emotional, or demographic variables. Postacutely, PTHA symptom severity declined within the group. Better individual improvement was associated with less anxiety and depression at 6-month follow-up. Almost all subjects (21/22) with PTHA symptoms that persisted into the 6-month follow-up period reported symptoms again at 12-month follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: PTHA severity in this sample of persons with moderate and severe TBI showed a pattern of improvement that leveled off by 6 months posthospitalization.
Authors: Jason D Kilts; Larry A Tupler; Francis J Keefe; Victoria M Payne; Robert M Hamer; Jennifer C Naylor; Rohana P Calnaido; Rajendra A Morey; Jennifer L Strauss; Gillian Parke; Mark W Massing; Nagy A Youssef; Lawrence J Shampine; Christine E Marx Journal: Pain Med Date: 2010-08-23 Impact factor: 3.750
Authors: Jeanne M Hoffman; Sylvia Lucas; Sureyya Dikmen; Cynthia A Braden; Allen W Brown; Robert Brunner; Ramon Diaz-Arrastia; William C Walker; Thomas K Watanabe; Kathleen R Bell Journal: J Neurotrauma Date: 2011-08-29 Impact factor: 5.269
Authors: Flora M Hammond; John D Corrigan; Jessica M Ketchum; James F Malec; Kristen Dams-OʼConnor; Tessa Hart; Thomas A Novack; Jennifer Bogner; Marie N Dahdah; Gale G Whiteneck Journal: J Head Trauma Rehabil Date: 2019 Jul/Aug Impact factor: 2.710
Authors: T W McGlennon; J N Buchwald; Walter J Pories; Fang Yu; Arthur Roberts; Eric P Ahnfeldt; Rukmini Menon; Henry Buchwald Journal: Obes Surg Date: 2020-10-30 Impact factor: 4.129