Competence Center for Transcultural Psychiatry, Mental Health Center Ballerup.
Danish Headache Center, Department of Neurology, Rigshospitalet Glostrup, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Glostrup, Denmark.
Cephalalgia. 2023 Mar;43(3):3331024221147502. doi: 10.1177/03331024221147502.
Headache is often comorbid with post-traumatic stress disorder yet overlooked in health assessments of refugees.
To describe prevalence of severe headache among refugees with post-traumatic stress disorder and compare severity of post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms and treatment outcomes among those with and without severe headache.
This follow-up study used data from the Danish Database on Refugees with Trauma. Participants were recruited from 2009 to 2015 at a specialized psychiatric clinic. Prevalence of severe headache was computed by age, sex, and history of head injury or torture. Severe headache was defined as maximum headache scores on the Hopkins Symptom Checklist, Symptom Checklist-90 or the Visual Analogue Scale. Groups with and without severe headache were described according to validated questionnaires before and after 12-18 months of multidisciplinary treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder. Regression analyses were used to analyze associations between headache at start of treatment and symptom burden post-treatment, controlled for pre-treatment scores and possible confounders.
Among 403 female and 489 male participants, nearly all (97.5%) complained of headaches. Severe headache prevalence was 31.4% to 50.0% (depending on which questionnaire was used) and was significantly more common among females and those aged 30-49 years. There was no clear relationship between headache and head injury or torture. Participants with severe headache had heavier symptom burdens compared to those without severe headache. Post-treatment, headache prevalence by age and sex did not change significantly. Those without severe headache showed a tendency toward improvement in outcome measures; this was not seen among those with severe headache. Pre-treatment headache scores were correlated with all outcome measures. Regression analyses controlled for pre-treatment scores of the outcome variables showed associations between pre-treatment headache scores (Hopkins Symptom Checklist or Symptom Checklist-90) and post-treatment scores for intrusion, numbing, hyperarousal, anxiety, disability, and quality of life (all p < 0.02).
Headache is a prevalent comorbid condition among refugees with post-traumatic stress disorder. Measures of pre-treatment headache severity appear to predict post-traumatic stress disorder treatment outcomes. Severe headache adversely affects post-traumatic stress disorder prognosis. Assessment and treatment options should be studied further.
头痛常与创伤后应激障碍共病,但在难民的健康评估中往往被忽视。
描述创伤后应激障碍难民中严重头痛的患病率,并比较有和无严重头痛的患者创伤后应激障碍症状严重程度和治疗结果。
本随访研究使用了丹麦创伤难民数据库的数据。参与者于 2009 年至 2015 年在一家专门的精神科诊所招募。通过年龄、性别以及头部受伤或酷刑的历史计算严重头痛的患病率。严重头痛定义为 Hopkins 症状清单、症状清单-90 或视觉模拟量表上的最大头痛评分。根据治疗前后 12-18 个月多学科创伤后应激障碍治疗的验证问卷,描述有和无严重头痛的组。回归分析用于分析治疗开始时头痛与治疗后症状负担之间的关联,同时控制治疗前评分和可能的混杂因素。
在 403 名女性和 489 名男性参与者中,几乎所有人(97.5%)都抱怨头痛。严重头痛的患病率为 31.4%至 50.0%(取决于使用的问卷),在女性和 30-49 岁年龄组中更为常见。头痛与头部受伤或酷刑之间没有明显的关系。与无严重头痛的患者相比,有严重头痛的患者症状负担更重。治疗后,按年龄和性别划分的头痛患病率没有明显变化。无严重头痛的患者表现出改善的趋势;而有严重头痛的患者则没有。治疗前头痛评分与所有结局指标均相关。回归分析控制了结局变量的治疗前评分,表明治疗前头痛评分(Hopkins 症状清单或症状清单-90)与创伤后应激障碍的侵入、麻木、警觉过度、焦虑、残疾和生活质量评分之间存在关联(所有 p 值均<0.02)。
头痛是创伤后应激障碍难民中常见的共病。治疗前头痛严重程度的测量似乎可以预测创伤后应激障碍的治疗结果。严重头痛会对创伤后应激障碍的预后产生不利影响。应进一步研究评估和治疗选择。