| Literature DB >> 24063537 |
Benedetta Bellini1, Marco Arruda, Alessandra Cescut, Cosetta Saulle, Antonello Persico, Marco Carotenuto, Michela Gatta, Renata Nacinovich, Fausta Paola Piazza, Cristiano Termine, Elisabetta Tozzi, Franco Lucchese, Vincenzo Guidetti.
Abstract
Headache is one of the most common neurological symptom reported in childhood and adolescence, leading to high levels of school absences and being associated with several comorbid conditions, particularly in neurological, psychiatric and cardiovascular systems. Neurological and psychiatric disorders, that are associated with migraine, are mainly depression, anxiety disorders, epilepsy and sleep disorders, ADHD and Tourette syndrome. It also has been shown an association with atopic disease and cardiovascular disease, especially ischemic stroke and patent foramen ovale (PFO).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24063537 PMCID: PMC3849985 DOI: 10.1186/1129-2377-14-79
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Models of relations between sleep and headache
| Sleep as trigger factor for headache (excessive, reduced or disrupted, increased deep sleep) | |
| Sleep as relieving factor for headache | |
| Sleep disturbance as cause of headache (es. sleep apnea) | |
| Headache as cause of sleep disturbance (es. attacks occurring during sleep) | |
| Sleep disorders in headache patients (parasomnias, sleepwalking) | |
| Sleep related headache: | |
| | a) Temporal relationship (during or after sleep) |
| | b) Sleep stage relationship: |
| | 1. REM sleep (migraine, cluster headache, chronic paroxysmal hemicrania) |
| | 2. Slow-wave sleep (migraine) |
| Headache/sleep association: | |
| | a) Intrinsic origin (modulation through the same neurotransmitters) |
| | b) Extrinsic origin (i.e. fibromyalgia syndrome) |
| c) Reinforcement (bad sleep hygiene) |
Proposed criteria for ictal epileptic headache (IEH)
| A. | Headache lasting seconds, minutes, hours or days; |
| B. | Headache that is ipsilateral or contralateral to lateralized ictal epileptiform EEG discharges (if EEG discharges are lateralized); |
| C. | Evidence of epileptiform (localized, lateralized or generalized) discharges on scalp EEG concomitantly with headache; different types of EEG anomalies may be observed (generalized spike-and-wave or polyspike-and-wave, focal or generalized rhythmic activity or focal subcontinuous spikes or theta activity that may be intermingled with sharp waves) with or without photoparoxysmal response (PPRs) |
| D. | Headache resolves immediately after i.v. antiepileptic medication |