Characterization of headache after traumatic brain injury
- PMID: 22623761
- DOI: 10.1177/0333102412445224
Characterization of headache after traumatic brain injury
Abstract
Background: Headache is a common and persistent symptom following traumatic brain injury (TBI). Headaches following TBI are defined primarily by their temporal association to injury, but have no defining clinical features. To provide a framework for treatment, primary headache symptoms were used to characterize headache.
Methods: Three hundred and seventy-eight participants were prospectively enrolled during acute in-patient rehabilitation for TBI. Headaches were classified into migraine/probable migraine, tension-type, or cervicogenic headache at baseline and 3, 6, and 12 months following TBI.
Results: Migraine was the most frequent headache type occurring in up to 38% of participants who reported headaches. Probable migraine occurred in up to 25%, tension-type headache in up to 21%, then cervicogenic headache in up to 10%. Females were more likely to have endorsed pre-injury migraine than males, and had migraine or probable migraine at all time points after injury. Those classified with migraine were more likely to have frequent headaches.
Conclusions: Our data show that most headache after TBI may be classified using primary headache criteria. Migraine/probable migraine described the majority of headache after TBI across one year post-injury. Using symptom-based criteria for headache following TBI can serve as a framework from which to provide evidence-based treatment for these frequent, severe, and persistent headaches.
Comment in
-
Post-traumatic headaches: time for a revised classification?Cephalalgia. 2012 Jun;32(8):589-91. doi: 10.1177/0333102412445220. Epub 2012 May 23. Cephalalgia. 2012. PMID: 22623763 No abstract available.
-
Epidemiology and classification of post-traumatic headache: what do we know and how do we move forward? Comment on Lucas et al., "Prevalence and characterization of headache following mild TBI".Cephalalgia. 2014 Feb;34(2):83-5. doi: 10.1177/0333102413499644. Epub 2013 Aug 8. Cephalalgia. 2014. PMID: 23928363 No abstract available.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
