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Clinical Trial
. 1998 Sep;23(3):143-57.
doi: 10.1023/a:1022267104369.

Comparison of biofeedback and relaxation in the treatment of pediatric headache and the influence of parent involvement on outcome

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Comparison of biofeedback and relaxation in the treatment of pediatric headache and the influence of parent involvement on outcome

B Kröner-Herwig et al. Appl Psychophysiol Biofeedback. 1998 Sep.

Abstract

The relative efficacy of EMG-frontalis feedback and progressive relaxation was examined in children with tension-type or combined headaches (8-14 yrs. old). Furthermore, the influence of parent involvement, in the form of a three-session educational approach, on training outcome was systematically explored (2 x 2 factor design). Fifty children took part in the study, 40 were randomly assigned to the four different treatment conditions, 10 children participated in the self-monitoring control group. The training comprised 6 sessions of 1 hr each in the relaxation treatment and 12 sessions of 1/2 hr duration in the biofeedback group. Headache diaries were kept by children and parents for 4-week period prior to therapy, and for a similar length of time at post-treatment and follow-up (6 months). Multivariate analyses of variance on the headache diary data yield no significant main or interaction effects of treatment format or of parent involvement, but only a main effect of period, indicating a general efficacy of the four treatment conditions. At follow-up the reduction of headache activity is even more prominent. A different evaluative approach points to the superiority of biofeedback revealing a mean effect size for biofeedback training that reflects a good to excellent improvement rate. Correlations between headache data from children and parents are high.

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