Department of Neurology, Severance Hospital, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Republic of Korea; Department of Neurology, Yongin Severance Hospital, Yonsei University Health System, Yongin, Republic of Korea.
Biostatistics Collaboration Unit, Department of Biomedical Systems Informatics, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
J Affect Disord. 2024 Jun 1;354:619-626. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2024.03.077. Epub 2024 Mar 15.
Depression, migraine, insomnia, and fibromyalgia are reportedly comorbidities. Nevertheless, no study has evaluated the comorbidity of all four of these disorders. This study aimed to investigate the comorbidity of these four disorders.
Cross-sectional analyses were performed using data of the Circannual Change in Headache and Sleep study, an online nationwide population-based survey. Validated questionnaires were used to diagnose the disorders and measure quality of life. The change of clinical characteristics by addition of any comorbidity was analyzed using the Jonckheere-Terpstra trend test.
The prevalence rates of depression, migraine, insomnia, and fibromyalgia were 7.2 %, 5.6 %, 13.3 %, and 5.8 %, respectively. Among the 3030 included participants, 494 (16.3 %), 164 (5.4 %), 40 (1.3 %), and 6 (0.2 %) had one, two, three, and four of these conditions, respectively. The number of headache days per 30 days (Jonckheere-Terpstra trend test, p = 0.011) and migraine-related disability (migraine disability assessment score, p = 0.021) increased with an increase in the number of comorbidities but not with the intensity of headache (visual analog scale, p = 0.225) among participants with migraine. The severity of insomnia (Insomnia Severity Index, p < 0.001) and fibromyalgia (fibromyalgia severity score, p = 0.002) increased with additional comorbidities; however, depression (Patient Health Questionnaire-9, p = 0.384) did not show such an increase.
The diagnoses of conditions were based on self-reported questionnaires.
The findings confirmed significant comorbidity between depression, migraine, insomnia, and fibromyalgia. Health professionals should be aware of the probable comorbidity of depression, migraine, insomnia, and fibromyalgia when caring for individuals with any of these four disorders.
据报道,抑郁、偏头痛、失眠和纤维肌痛是共病。然而,尚无研究评估这四种疾病同时存在的共病情况。本研究旨在探讨这四种疾病的共病情况。
使用在线全国性人群基础调查 Circannual Change in Headache and Sleep 研究的数据进行横断面分析。使用经过验证的问卷来诊断这些疾病并测量生活质量。使用 Jonckheere-Terpstra 趋势检验分析任何共病存在时临床特征的变化。
抑郁、偏头痛、失眠和纤维肌痛的患病率分别为 7.2%、5.6%、13.3%和 5.8%。在 3030 名纳入的参与者中,分别有 494 人(16.3%)、164 人(5.4%)、40 人(1.3%)和 6 人(0.2%)患有其中一种、两种、三种和四种疾病。偏头痛患者中,随着共病数量的增加,每月头痛天数(Jonckheere-Terpstra 趋势检验,p=0.011)和偏头痛相关残疾(偏头痛残疾评估评分,p=0.021)增加,但头痛严重程度(视觉模拟量表,p=0.225)无此变化。随着共病的增加,失眠严重程度(失眠严重程度指数,p<0.001)和纤维肌痛严重程度(纤维肌痛严重程度评分,p=0.002)增加;然而,抑郁(患者健康问卷-9,p=0.384)没有这种增加。
疾病的诊断基于自我报告的问卷。
这些发现证实了抑郁、偏头痛、失眠和纤维肌痛之间存在显著的共病关系。当护理患有这四种疾病之一的个体时,医疗保健专业人员应意识到抑郁、偏头痛、失眠和纤维肌痛可能同时存在。