| Literature DB >> 24641507 |
Fabio Antonaci1, Cristina Voiticovschi-Iosob, Anna Luisia Di Stefano, Federica Galli, Aynur Ozge, Umberto Balottin.
Abstract
Headache is one of the most common disorders in childhood, with an estimated 75% of children reporting significant headache by the age of 15 years. Pediatric migraine is the most frequent recurrent headache disorder, occurring in up to 28% of older teenagers. Headaches rank third among the illness-related causes of school absenteeism and result in substantial psychosocial impairment among pediatric patients. The aim of this study was to clarify the evolution of the clinical features of primary headache in the transition from childhood to adulthood through a review of relevant data available in the PubMed and Google Scholar databases for the period 1988 to July 2013.The search strategy identified 15 published articles which were considered eligible for inclusion in the analysis (i.e., relevant to the investigation of pediatric headache outcome). All were carried out after the publication of the first version of the International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD-I). The availability of data on the evolution of primary headaches over a period of time is important from both a clinical and a public health perspective. The identification of prognostic factors of the evolution of headache (remission or evolution into another headache form) over time should be an objective of future headache research for the development of prevention strategies. Given that headache is a major factor contributing to school absenteeism and poorer quality of life not only in childhood but also in adolescence, understanding the natural history and the management of the different headache forms is vital for our future.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24641507 PMCID: PMC3995299 DOI: 10.1186/1129-2377-15-15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Summary of the evolution of the temporal pattern of headache in children (M = migraine, TTH = tension-type headache; CH = cluster headache)
| Guidetti et al. [ | prospective, 8-year follow-up | age 12–26 yrs., (mean age 17.9 yrs.) | M, TTH | - 26.5% of the patients with M changed to TTH. | - high rate of headache remission in males. |
| - 8.3% with TTH changed to M. | |||||
| - 45% showed improvement, 34% were headache free, 15% unchanged, 6% worsened. | |||||
| Hernandez-Latorre et al. [ | 10-year prospective longitudinal study | >6 ≥ 10 yrs. | M | - favorable evolution among children with headache started after 6 yrs. | |
| - 88% favorable clinical course; 12% placed on prophylactic treatment. | |||||
| Brna et al. [ | prospective, 20-year follow-up | mean age 11.1 yrs. | M, TTH | - 66% improvement | - triggers of headache: stress, sleep deprivation, bright light, certain foods. |
| - more TTH remission | - 38% motion sickness | ||||
| - 45% with mild headaches were headache free at 20 years; | - 13% rushes sensory disturbance | ||||
| - 18% with moderate/severe headaches were headache free at 20 yrs | - 7% Alice in Wonderland syndrome | ||||
| - 72% with moderate/severe headaches continued to have moderate or severe headaches at 20 yrs. | |||||
| Balottin et al. [ | prospective, 4.2-year follow-up | < 6 yrs. | M, TTH | - headache persistence in the minority of cases associated with detection of somatic and psychiatric disorders. | - |
| Kienbacher et al. [ | prospective | 17.6 ± 3.1 yrs. | M, TTH | - 25.7% were headache free, 48.6% still M and 25.7% still TTH at the follow-up. | - unfavorable outcome: longer time between headache onset and first consultation |
| - good prognosis: changing headache location at baseline and long clinical follow-up | |||||
| Kelman et al. [ | cross- sectional study, retrospective analysis | mean age 37.7 ± 11.7 yrs | M | - new headache triggers: hormones, alcohol, smoking, neck pain; | - stress as a trigger, photophobia, phonophobia and dizziness, decrease with age; |
| - shift in headache location toward the neck. | - decrease in the strength of attacks, and reduced need to sleep or rest during headache | ||||
| - increase in rhinorrhea and lacrimation | |||||
| Virtanen et al. [ | prospective, controlled study | 6-13 yrs | M, TTH | - 1/2 of M unchanged at 6 yrs; 32% changed to TTH. | - osmophobia, dizziness and balance disturbances became more typical with age |
| - TTH unchanged in 35%; 38% changed to M. | - restlessness, flushing and abdominal symptoms became less marked. | ||||
| - at preschool age the location of headache was bilateral and | |||||
| - supraorbital; at puberty bilateral and temporal. | |||||
| Gaßmann et al. [ | prospective, 4-year longitudinal study | 8-15 yrs | M, TTH | - M more frequent in girls than boys, and this difference increased significantly with age. | |
| - TTH dropped from 57% among 8-year-olds to 45.6% among 15-year-olds. | |||||
| - M increased with age from 10 to 17.1%. | |||||
| Slater et al. [ | prospective, retrospective | mean age 11.7 ± 3.6 | M | - early onset of headache in boys | - higher levels of disability as shown by PedMIDAS and no. of missed schooldays in girls. |
| - boys’ headache: squeezing at the top of the head; sharp pain at the back of the head | - older children were more disabled. | ||||
| - girls reported frontal and temporal headache, and pain in the back of the head; pain: throbbing, pressure, constant and sharp. | |||||
| - girls experienced more frequent and longer mean duration of headaches. | |||||
| - older children reported greater headache frequency. | |||||
| Ozge et al. [ | prospective, longitudinal, school-based six-year interval analysis | 8-18 5562 children of whom 1155 followed up as adolescents | M, TTH | - childhood headache persists in adolescence, although the diagnoses mostly (71.3%) changed over time. | - PedMIDAS score higher in subjects with parents with headache history |
| - M prevalence increased from 10.4% in childhood to 18.6% to adolescence in the same study sample after a 6-year interval. | - No supportive correlation with BMI MOH frequency 13.0% with migraine and high PedMIDAS score predominance | ||||
| - Headache prevalence increased with advancing age, especially in females; stress factors were the most important determinants. | |||||
| - M negatively affects daily living activities in adolescents. | |||||
| Wöber- Bingol et al. [ | cross- sectional study, retrospective analysis | 3- 69 yrs | M with or without aura | - aggravation by physical activity found to be decreased with age. | |
| - increasing of headache duration with age, prevalence of unilateral and pulsating pain, photo and phonophobia in girls. | - aura more frequent among ages 15–40 years | ||||
| - no gender differences in aura symptoms. | |||||
| Maytal et al. [ | retrospective | 18 yrs or younger | CH | - clinical features of CH in childhood similar to those in adults. | -changes in associated symptoms over the years in a small number of patients |
| - increase in frequency and duration of cluster periods with age in 40%. | |||||
| - decrease in duration of cluster periods in 6% | |||||
| - short cluster periods in 23% of patients in childhood and in 6% of patients in adulthood. | |||||
| - CH shifted sides in one patient. | |||||
| Lampl [ | epidemiological + 1 case report | 7 years | CH | - no data about evolution of headache | |
| - frequency and duration may increase or remain unchanged over time if pts are untreated | |||||
| - although brief remissions may occur, spontaneous resolution of CH is rare. | |||||
| Antonaci et al., [ | case report and literature review | case of an 11-year-old boy | CH | - first bout 8 months; second bout 2 months, with the same pain characteristics. | |
| - this patient as a ‘variant’clinical picture | |||||
| Arruda et al. [ | prospective case report | 9, 12 and 13 yrs | CH | - no differences between childhood and adult CH regarding frequency and duration | |
| - good response to indomethacin in two cases; | |||||
| - sustained long-term medical and/or spontaneous remission occurred in two patients. |