| Literature DB >> 33683636 |
Philipp Burow1, Anneke Meyer2, Steffen Naegel2, Stefan Watzke3, Stephan Zierz2, Torsten Kraya2,4.
Abstract
Headache is frequent in patients with mitochondrial disorders. Previous studies point to a higher prevalence of headache in these patients than in the general population. As mitochondrial disorders often present a variety of other symptoms, the question arises how much the presence of headache really influences daily life. We performed a cross-sectional, questionnaire-based study investigation with 61 patients with a genetically proved mitochondrial disease mainly composed of CPEO phenotype. Headache was examined using a standardized questionnaire, and classified according to ICHD-2. Headache-related disability was evaluated by the Headache-Impact-Test-6 (HIT-6). Additionally, depression and anxiety were examined using the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) and Short-Form-Health Survey (SF-12) was used to investigate the health-related quality of life. Headache was reported by 43/61 (70.5%) of the patients. 35/61 patients (57.4%) described a Tension-type headache (TTH) and 26 patients (42.6%) a migraine. Patients reporting headache had a significantly higher HIT-6 score than those without (mean: 54.47 vs. 38.47, p < 0.001). The HIT-6 score was significantly higher in patients reporting a migraine compared to those with a tension-type headache (mean: 62.13 vs. 46.18, p < 0.001). In the HADS score and in the SF-12 were not significantly influenced by the occurrence of headache. This study confirms the previously reported frequent occurrence of headache in a large cohort of patients with a confirmed mitochondrial disease. Migraine had the greatest impact on daily living, which appeared not to be confounded by depression and anxiety. Thus, we conclude that Migraine may be a substantial contributor for burden of disease in patients with mitochondrial diseases.Entities:
Keywords: CPEO; Headache; Migraine; Mitochondrial disease
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33683636 PMCID: PMC8443488 DOI: 10.1007/s13760-021-01630-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neurol Belg ISSN: 0300-9009 Impact factor: 2.396
Frequency of headache subtypes of the whole study cohort in comparison to the CPEO subgroup
| Whole cohort ( | CPEO subcohort ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No headache | 18/61 (29%) | 11/39 (29%) | ||
| Headache (any) | 43/61 (71%) | 28/39 (71%) | ||
| Migraine and TTH | 18/61 (29%) | 26/61 (43%) | 14/39 (36%) | 19/39 (49%) |
| Pure migraine | 8/61 (13%) | 5/39 (13%) | ||
| Pure TTH | 17/61 (27%) | 9/39 (23%) | ||
The percentage values were always calculated in relation to the corresponding cohort. The total number of migraine patients in each cohort is given on the right side. For pure migraine, migraine and tension-type headache (TTH) a summed value is given, as migraine and TTH may be chronic migraine (according to ICHD-3)
Fig. 1Results of the HIT-6 and SF-12 tests of the whole cohort depending on the headache diagnosis. All bars in the graph show mean values and standard deviations. For the number of patients, we refer to Table 1. The statistical analysis is presented in the text. a HIT-6 values of the indicated subgroups. The group “only migraine” includes all patients with a migraine without a tension-type headache as diagnosed from the questionnaire and is thus a subgroup of “migraine”. The dashed reference line displays the minimum score of the HIT-6 (36 points). b SF-12 values separately for both the mental and the physical part
Results of the SF-12 and HADS questionnaire
| SF-12 (mental part) | SF-12 (physical part) | HADS: depression sum score | HADS: anxiety sum score | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No headache ( | 47.46 ± 11.98 | 36.99 ± 9.07 | 7.22 ± 5.07 | 6.17 ± 5.25 |
| Any headache ( | 44.19 ± 12.79 | 35.65 ± 9.88 | 7.74 ± 5.09 | 6.98 ± 5.08 |
| Migraine and TTH ( | 41.17 ± 13.27 | 34.95 ± 10.29 | 8.46 ± 5.38 | 7.96 ± 5.53 |
| Pure migraine ( | 42.00 ± 14.22 | 34.90 ± 7.27 | 6.88 ± 4.16 | 6.63 ± 4.17 |
| Pure TTH ( | 48.63 ± 10.95 | 36.68 ± 9.46 | 6.65 ± 4.57 | 5.47 ± 4.00 |
The values are given as mean ± standard deviation. The statistical analysis is given in the text