Dooley Joseph M, Gordon Kevin E, Wood Ellen P, Brna Paula M
Pediatric Neurology Division, Dalhousie University and the IWK Health Centre, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Pediatr Neurol. 2006 Aug;35(2):119-21. doi: 10.1016/j.pediatrneurol.2006.01.006.
Data was analyzed from the nationally representative Canadian Community Health Survey. A total of 17,549 adolescents reported whether they had "migraine headaches" (response rate 99.9%) and in what exercise activities they participated. Those with migraine reported more daily activity than migraine-free peers when corrected for age and sex. They were as likely to play contact sports but were more involved in other noncompetitive activities, such as walking (P<0.001), gardening and yard work (P=0.008), jogging and running (P=0.002), and fishing (P=0.03). Canadian adolescents with migraine are therefore overall more active than their peers without migraine.