Student Scientific Group of Neurology, Faculty of Medicine, Medical University of Gdańsk, Gdańsk, Poland.
Department of Hygiene and Epidemiology, Faculty of Medicine, Medical University of Gdańsk, Gdańsk, Poland.
Headache. 2022 Jul;62(7):811-817. doi: 10.1111/head.14329. Epub 2022 Jun 7.
To investigate whether web searching for headache disorders presents some circannual rhythm.
Studies support the influence of seasonal rhythms in primary headache disorders such as cluster headache (CH) and episodic migraine. We investigated whether internet users' searching for headaches reflect these circannual rhythms.
This was an internet-based study using the Google Trends (Google) platform. The 10-year interest across four related topics (headache, migraine, tension-type headache [TTH], and CH) in 31 European countries was scanned.
Significant differences between months were found for the topics "headache" and "migraine." Interest in the former was superior in February (median for all countries, 61 [25th-75th percentile, 45-80]), October (61 [44-75]), and November (61 [45-76]). The lowest search volumes for headache appeared in July (52 [37-66]) (p < 0.001). Migraine was searched most commonly in November (56 [40-73]) and rarely in June (46.5 [31-64]) (p < 0.001). Differences were observed for the topic of headache in Northern Europe (p = 0.001) and for headache and migraine in Central Europe (p < 0.001 and p = 0.016 respectively) but not in the southern region. TTH and CH were apparently less searched and no evident trends regarding them were present (median, 22 [0-44] for TTH and 15 [0-33] for CH; direct popularity comparison: headache 56 [44-63], migraine 16 [12-24], TTH 2 [1-2], and CH 2 [1-2]; between-month differences, p = 0.168 and p = 0.081 respectively).
Public attention on headache-related topics on the internet is distributed according to a significant trend of increased searching around spring and autumn. It suggests that a large number of patients may experience some level of seasonal variation in their headaches. Assessment of whether those temporal changes are present in clinical practice is necessary.
研究头痛障碍的网络搜索是否存在某种年循环节律。
研究支持原发性头痛障碍(如丛集性头痛[CH]和发作性偏头痛)的季节性节律的影响。我们研究了互联网用户对头痛的搜索是否反映了这些年循环节律。
这是一项基于互联网的研究,使用了 Google Trends(谷歌)平台。扫描了 31 个欧洲国家 10 年来与 4 个相关主题(头痛、偏头痛、紧张型头痛[TTH]和 CH)相关的 10 年兴趣。
在“头痛”和“偏头痛”这两个主题上发现了月份之间的显著差异。前者的兴趣在 2 月(所有国家的中位数,61[25 至 75 百分位,45 至 80])、10 月(61[44 至 75])和 11 月(61[45 至 76])最高。7 月(52[37 至 66])出现的头痛搜索量最低(p<0.001)。偏头痛最常出现在 11 月(56[40 至 73]),而在 6 月(46.5[31 至 64])很少出现(p<0.001)。在北欧观察到头痛主题的差异(p=0.001),在中欧观察到头痛和偏头痛的差异(p<0.001 和 p=0.016),但在南部地区没有观察到差异。TTH 和 CH 的搜索量明显较少,且没有明显的趋势(中位数,TTH 为 22[0 至 44],CH 为 15[0 至 33];直接流行度比较:头痛 56[44 至 63],偏头痛 16[12 至 24],TTH 2[1 至 2],CH 2[1 至 2];月份间差异,p=0.168 和 p=0.081)。
互联网上与头痛相关主题的公众关注度呈明显的春、秋两季搜索增加的趋势分布。这表明大量患者的头痛可能存在某种季节性变化。有必要评估这些时间变化是否存在于临床实践中。