| Literature DB >> 33193010 |
Leila Karimi1,2, Sheila Gillard Crewther1, Tissa Wijeratne1,3,4, Andrew E Evans5, Leila Afshari6, Hanan Khalil1.
Abstract
Objective: The aims of the present systematic review were to explore the prevalence of migraine with anxiety exclusively and determine if and why there are likely to be differences across genders. Introduction: Migraine is a very common neurological disorder and cause of productive disability worldwide that is more frequent in women of childbearing age than males. Previous studies have frequently demonstrated comorbidity of migraine and other psychiatric disorders. Although the prevalence of migraine across gender is well-established there are few if any systematic reviews on the prevalence of migraine comorbidity with anxiety cross-genders.Entities:
Keywords: anxiety; gender difference; migraine; prevalence; systematic review
Year: 2020 PMID: 33193010 PMCID: PMC7649320 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2020.569405
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Key terms used in the search.
| Migraine disorders (Mesh) | Anxiety |
Risk of bias in prevalence studies.
| Oh et al. ( | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No |
| Rammohan et al. ( | Yes | Yes | No | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear |
| Senaratne et al. ( | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Victor et al. ( | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Yong et al. ( | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Risk of bias in cohort studies.
| Karakurum et al. ( | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Unclear | Unclear | Yes |
Figure 1PRISMA.
Characteristics of Included Studies—Prevalence, cohort, and cross-sectional studies.
| South America | 75%−192 | ||||||
| Brazil/Mercante et al. ( | The Anxiety Disorders Program of the Institute of Psychiatry | 60 | 19–70 | ICHD-II | GAD | 66.6%−20 | 66.7%−20 |
| Brazil/Peres et al. ( | Primary care self-administered questionnaire | 782 | 34.2 (6.3) | Self-reported ICHD-II | GAD-7 (anxiety) | 213 migraine | 83%−177 |
| North America | 52%−2,699 | ||||||
| Canada/Senaratne et al. ( | Outpatient anxiety clinic- computer-assisted telephone interview (CATI) | 206 | 37.8 (12.9) | IHS | GAD | 67%−138 | 58.5%−62 |
| US/Victor et al. ( | Epidemiological national survey | 30,790 | 43.6 | Self-reported medical diagnosis of migraine | Self-reported anxious symptomology [25] | 15.2%−4,680 (14.7, 15.7) | 2.30 (2.09, 2.52) |
| US/Wachholtz et al. ( | The online chronic migraine population | 4,787 | 18–65 | Self-reported medical diagnosis of migraine | Not mentioned | 100% | 56.4%−2,699 |
| Asia | 38%−205 | ||||||
| Turkey/Karakurum et al. ( | n/c | 87 | CM: 32.1 (10.4) | IHS | Hamilton Anxiety Scale (HAS) | 100% | 75.6%−28 |
| Korea/Oh et al. ( | Primary care-population based surveys | 2,762 | 19–69 | ICHD-2 | Goldberg Anxiety Scale [13] | 5.4%−147 | 30.1%−45 |
| India/Rammohan et al. ( | Migraine patients of the Neurology Outpatient Department | 133 | 34.13 (8.49) | ICHD-3 | The Hospital Anxiety Scale (HADS-A) | 100%−133 | 16.54%−22 |
| China/Yong et al. ( | Headache outpatient clinic | 185 | 14–63 | ICHD-2 | HADS | 95%−176 | 38.1%−67 |
| Korea/Song et al. ( | Primary care-population based structured interviews | 2,695 | 19–69 | ICHD-3 | State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) | 5.3%−143 (4.5–6.2) | 30.1%−43 |
| Europe | 19%−454 | ||||||
| European union countries/Lampl et al. ( | Primary care-population based surveys | 6,624 | 42.1 (12.9) | ICHD-2 | HADS | 35.9%−2,375 (34.7–37.1) | 19.1%−454 (17.5–20.7) |
Risk of bias in Cross sectional studies.
| Mercante et al. ( | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Yes |
| Lampl et al. ( | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes | Yes |
| Peres et al. ( | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Yes |
| Song et al. ( | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Yes |
| Wachholtz et al. ( | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Yes |