| Literature DB >> 21301921 |
Erling Tronvik1, John-Anker Zwart, Knut Hagen, Grete Dyb, Turid Lingaas Holmen, Lars Jacob Stovner.
Abstract
The relationship between blood pressure and headache in youth has not been explored and the objective of the present study was to provide data on this association in an adolescent population. Cross-sectional data from a large population-based survey, the Young-HUNT study, on 5,847 adolescents were used to evaluate the association between blood pressure (systolic, diastolic, mean arterial and pulse pressure) and recurrent headache, including migraine and tension-type headache. Increasing pulse pressure was inversely related to recurrent headache prevalence, and both tension-type headache and migraine. For systolic blood pressure such an inverse relationship was present for recurrent headache and tension-type headache prevalence. For migraine, the results were not significant, although there was a tendency in the same direction (p = 0.05). High-pulse pressure has previously been found to be inversely related to the prevalence of migraine and tension-type headache in an adult population. This inverse relationship has now been demonstrated to be present among adolescents also, supporting the results from a previous study in adults, that blood pressure regulation may be linked to the pathophysiology of headache.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21301921 PMCID: PMC3094673 DOI: 10.1007/s10194-011-0304-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Study population
| Schools | Number invited (aged 12–19 years) | Participants with valid questionnaires (aged 13–18 years) | Participants included with valid questionnaires, interviews and blood pressure data (aged 13–18 years) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Mean age (SD) | % Girls |
| Mean age (SD) | % Girls | ||
| Junior high school | 5,004 | 4,508 | 14.6 (0.9) | 50.5 | 3,265 | 14.7 (0.9) | 51.0 |
| High school | 4,913 | 3,733 | 17.4 (0.9) | 49.2 | 2,555 | 17.5 (0.9) | 52.9 |
| ‘Not in school’ | 285 | 14 | 17.2 (0.9) | 64.3 | 12 | 17.2 (0.9) | 75.0 |
| Total | 10,202 | 8,255 | 15.9 (1.7) | 49.9 | 5,832 | 5.9 (1.6) | 51.9 |
SD standard deviation
See Ref. [12] for more detailed information
The prevalence of overall recurrent headache, and subgroups migraine, tension-type headache, and non-classifiable headache
| Overall recurrent headache (%) | Migraine (%) | Tension-type headache (%) | Non-classifiable headache (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boys | 581 (20.7) | 115 (4.1) | 330 (11.8) | 117 (4.2) |
| Girls | 1,091 (36.0) | 226 (7.5) | 652 (21.5) | 163 (5.4) |
Sixty-nine participants had co-occurrence of migraine and tension-type headache and these were excluded from the migraine and tension-type headache groups
Recurrent headache frequency
| <1 day per month (%) | 1–3 days per month (%) | 1–5 days per week (%) | >5 days per week (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boys | 147 (5.2) | 279 (10.0) | 112 (4.0) | 5 (0.2) |
| Girls | 174 (5.7) | 542 (17.9) | 329 (10.9) | 24 (0.8) |
Fig. 1The relation between blood pressure and recurrent headache in both genders combined (ORs with 95% CIs, n = 5,832)
Fig. 2The prevalence of tension-type headache (TTH) and migraine in groups with pulse pressure (PP) above or below the median related to age (both genders)