| Literature DB >> 30538669 |
Frank Andrasik1, Licia Grazzi2, Emanuela Sansone2, Domenico D'Amico2, Alberto Raggi3, Eleonora Grignani3.
Abstract
Headache disorders are common in children and adolescents. Most of the studies on non-pharmacological treatments have however been carried out on adults. In this review we provide information on recent studies examining non-pharmacological approaches for managing headache in children and adolescents. Our search of SCOPUS for primary studies conducted between January 2010 and July 2018 uncovered 11 controlled studies, mostly addressing behavioral approaches, in which a total of 613 patients with a diagnosis of primary headache, and average age 10.2-15.7 years (30-89% females) were recruited. Non-pharmacological treatments were shown to produce sizeable effects on the classical primary endpoint, i.e., headache frequency, with reductions from baseline ranging between 34 and 78%. Among commonly reported secondary endpoints, particularly disability, quality of life, depression and anxiety, marked improvements were noted as well. Taken as a whole, our findings suggest that non-pharmacological treatments constitute a valid option for the prevention of primary headaches in young age. Future research with higher-quality studies is needed. Particular attention needs to be given to studies that randomize patients to condition, blind researchers in charge of evaluating treatment outcomes, routinely include headache frequency as the primary endpoint, include adequate-length follow-up, address changes in biomarkers of disease and other possible mediators of outcome, and that employ predictive models to enhance the level of evidence for these approaches.Entities:
Keywords: biofeedback; cognitive-behavioral therapy; depression; disability; migraine; mindfulness; tension-type headache; transcranial magnetic stimulation
Year: 2018 PMID: 30538669 PMCID: PMC6277635 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2018.01009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Flowchart of papers' selection.
Main characteristics and main outcomes of the included studies.
| Powers et al. ( | CBT + Amitriptyline | Headache education + Amitriptyline | CM | 135 (80%) | 14.4 | 21.4–6 | −71.9%(**) | CBT determined significant reduction in headache frequency and improvements in migraine-related disability. |
| Rapoff et al. ( | CBT | Medical therapy (as prescribed for usual clinical practice) | EM | 35 (88%) | 10.2 | 13.7–7.1 | −48.2% (ns) | CBT determined improvements in post-intervention headache severity and in 3-months post-intervention QoL. |
| Hickman et al. ( | CBT | Headache education | CH | 36 (81.2%) | 15.1 | nr—nr | CBT determined significant improvements in headache disability, anxiety, depression and healthy lifestyle beliefs. | |
| Law et al. ( | Internet-delivered CBT | Specialized headache treatment (medical, physical, psychological) | Mixed (EM, TTH, both, other) | 83 (81.9%) | 14.5 | 24–15.4 | −35.8% (**) | CBT determined significant headache reduction and improvements on headache pain intensity, activity limitations, depressive symptoms and parent protective behaviors. |
| Sharma et al. ( | CBT | Medical therapy (as prescribed for usual clinical practice) | Mixed (Primary headache) | 63 (47.6%) | 13.91 | nr—nr | CBT determined significant improvements on headache severity, clinician-rated overall anxiety and state and trait anxiety. | |
| Tornoe and Skov ( | BFB + RT | NA | Mixed (TTH/CTTH) | 9 (88.9%) | 10.9 | 19.1–11.1 | −41.88% ( | BFB determined significant headache frequency reduction. |
| Blume et al. ( | BFB | NA | Mixed (Primary headache) | 132 (69.7%) | 13.4 | 14–8 | −42.9% ( | BFB determined improvements in headache frequency and severity. |
| Shiri et al. ( | BFB | NA | Mixed (CTTH, CM) | 10 (30%) | 13.4 | 17—nr | BFB significantly improved ratings of pain, daily functioning and quality of life. | |
| Hesse et al. ( | Mind | NA | Recurrent head | 15 (100%) | 14.15 | 4.6—nr | Mindfulness determined improvements in depression symptoms, pain acceptance and in parents-rated physical health-related quality of life. | |
| Irwin et al. ( | TMS | NA | CM | 12 (66.7%) | 15 | 13.3–8.8 | −33.8% ( | TMS determined improvements in headache frequency, acute medication use and headache-related disability. |
| Prezekop et al. ( | Multimodal treatment | Medical prophylaxis (Amitriptyline or Gabapentin) | CTTH | 83 (80.7%) | 15.7 | 22.3–4.9 | −78% ( | Multimodal treatment determined improvements in headache frequency, pain intensity, general health, pain restriction and number of bilateral tender points. |
Significance was reported as
p < 0.05;
p < 0.001; ns, not significant; nr, not reported.