Calhoun Anne H, Ford Sutapa
Department of Neurology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA.
Headache. 2007 Sep;47(8):1178-83. doi: 10.1111/j.1526-4610.2007.00780.x.
Sleep problems have been linked with headaches for more than a century, but whether the headaches are the cause or the result of the disrupted sleep is unknown.
We previously reported that nonrestorative sleep and poor sleep habits are almost universal in a referral population of women with transformed migraine (TM). Since cognitive behavioral therapy is effective in improving sleep quality in individuals with poor sleep hygiene, we designed a randomized, placebo-controlled study to assess the impact of such treatment on TM. We hypothesized that behavioral sleep modification (BSM) would be associated with improvement in headache frequency and intensity and with reversion to episodic migraine.
Subjects were 43 women with TM referred to an academic headache center. After obtaining informed consent, patients were randomized to receive either behavioral sleep instructions or placebo behavioral instructions in addition to usual medical care. Subjects recorded headaches in standardized diaries. The first postintervention visit was scheduled at 6 weeks. At that visit, the blind was broken and all subjects received BSM instructions. A final visit was scheduled 6 weeks later.
Compared to the placebo behavioral group, the BSM group reported statistically significant reduction in headache frequency [F (1, 33 = 12.42, P=.001)] and headache intensity [F(1, 33 = 14.39, P= .01)]. They were more likely to revert to episodic migraine chi2 (2, n = 43) = 7.06, P= .029. No member of the control group reverted to episodic migraine by the first postintervention visit. By the final visit, 48.5% of those who had received BSM instructions had reverted to episodic migraine.
In this pilot study of women with TM, we found that a targeted behavioral sleep invention was associated with improvement in headache frequency, headache index, and with reversion to episodic migraine.
睡眠问题与头痛的关联已存在一个多世纪,但尚不清楚头痛是睡眠紊乱的原因还是结果。
我们之前报道过,在转诊来的转化型偏头痛(TM)女性患者群体中,睡眠恢复不佳和睡眠习惯不良几乎普遍存在。由于认知行为疗法对改善睡眠卫生差的个体的睡眠质量有效,我们设计了一项随机、安慰剂对照研究,以评估这种治疗对TM的影响。我们假设行为睡眠调整(BSM)将与头痛频率和强度的改善以及向发作性偏头痛的转变相关。
研究对象为43名转诊至学术性头痛中心的TM女性患者。获得知情同意后,患者被随机分配,除接受常规医疗护理外,分别接受行为睡眠指导或安慰剂行为指导。受试者在标准化日记中记录头痛情况。干预后首次随访安排在6周时。在那次随访时,揭盲,所有受试者均接受BSM指导。6周后安排最后一次随访。
与安慰剂行为组相比,BSM组报告头痛频率[F(1, 33)=12.42,P=.001]和头痛强度[F(1, 33)=14.39,P=.01]在统计学上显著降低。她们更有可能转变为发作性偏头痛,χ2(2, n = 43)=7.06,P=.029。对照组中没有成员在干预后首次随访时转变为发作性偏头痛。到最后一次随访时,接受BSM指导的患者中有48.5%转变为发作性偏头痛。
在这项针对TM女性患者的初步研究中,我们发现有针对性的行为睡眠干预与头痛频率、头痛指数的改善以及向发作性偏头痛的转变相关。