Headache 2010;••:••-••
Anne H. Calhoun, MD; Sutapa Ford, PhD; Cori Millen, DO; Alan G. Finkel, MD; Young Truong, PhD; Yonghong Nie, MS
From the Carolina Headache Institute, Chapel Hill, NC, USA (A.H. Calhoun, S. Ford, and A.G. Finkel); University of North Carolina, Department of Psychiatry, Chapel Hill, NC, USA (A.H. Calhoun, S. Ford, and A.G. Finkel); University of North Carolina, Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Chapel Hill, NC, USA (S. Ford); Blue Sky Neurology, Denver, CO, USA (C. Millen); University of North Carolina, Department of Biostatistics, Chapel Hill, NC, USA (Y. Truong and Y. Nie).
Correspondence to A.H. Calhoun, Carolina Headache Institute, 103 Market Street, Chapel Hill, NC 27516, USA.
Financial support: This investigator-initiated study was funded by GlaxoSmithKline.
Conflict of Interest: Dr. Calhoun is a consultant for Merck. Dr. Finkel is on Merck speaker bureau; Dr. Calhoun receives research support and is a consultant for Teva Pharmaceuticals; Drs. Ford, Millen-Schnurr, Truong, and Ms. Nie have no conflicts to report.
Copyright © 2010 American Headache Society
ABSTRACT
Objective.—To determine the prevalence of neck pain at the time of migraine treatment relative to the prevalence of nausea, a defining associated symptom of migraine.
Methods.—This is a prospective, observational cross-sectional study of 113 migraineurs, ranging in attack frequency from episodic to chronic migraine. Subjects were examined by headache medicine specialists to confirm the diagnosis of migraine and exclude both cervicogenic headache and fibromyalgia. Details of all migraines were recorded over the course of at least 1 month and until 6 qualifying migraines had been treated. For each attack, subjects recorded the presence or absence of nausea as well as the intensity of headache and neck pain (graded as none, mild, moderate, or severe).
Results.—Subjects recorded 2411 headache days, 786 of which were migraines. The majority of migraines were treated in the moderate pain stage. Regardless of the intensity of headache pain at time of treatment, neck pain was a more frequent accompaniment of migraine than was nausea (P < .0001). Prevalence of neck pain correlated with chronicity of headache as attacks moved from episodic to chronic daily headache.
Conclusions.—In this representative cross-section of migraineurs, neck pain was more commonly associated with migraine than was nausea, a defining characteristic of the disorder. Awareness of neck pain as a common associated feature of migraine may improve diagnostic accuracy and have a beneficial impact on time to treatment.
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Accepted for publication December 3, 2009.
DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1526-4610.2009.01608.x About DOI
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
The Prevalence of Neck Pain in Migraine
Labels:
cervicalgia,
headache,
migraine,
nausea,
neck pain,
prevalence
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