Radvanyi Ildiko, Tibold Antal, Fejes Eva, Mak Kornel, Beke Szilvia, Fehér Gergely, Nyulas Rita, Gaal Valeria
Centre for Occupational Medicine, Medical School, University of Pécs, Pécs, Hungary.
Hospital of Komló, Komló, Hungary.
Front Public Health. 2024 Dec 16;12:1445856. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1445856. eCollection 2024.
Recent studies suggest that increased digital technology usage could be a factor in the rising occurrence and severity of headache episodes. The purpose of this cross-sectional study was to determine whether the severity of primary headaches (migraine and tension-type headache) is associated with problematic internet use taking many covariates into account.
We conducted an online cross-sectional survey using a quantitative, descriptive questionnaire, targeting university students enrolled in correspondence courses, aged 18 to 65. The survey included socio-demographic parameters, risk factors, concomitant diseases, medical history of headaches, and details of online activities. Psychometric measurements contained the Problematic Internet Use Questionnaire, the 9-item short version of the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-SF), and the Athens Insomnia Questionnaire.
A total of 550 responders ( = 480 female; = 70 male) completed the online questionnaire package. Among the participants, 202 individuals (36.7%) reported experiencing headaches, 74 had migraines and 119 had tension-type headache. Internet addiction was detected in 46 (8.4%) participants. Multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) showed that significant risk factors of all primary headaches severity included being <30 years ( = 0.044, OR = 3.439), not having children ( = 0.014, OR = 2.493), being married ( = 0.035, OR = 2.528), spending more than 4 h per day on the internet ( = 0.021, OR = 1.088), experiencing mood disturbances ( = 0.033, OR = 1.345) and the presence of insomnia ( = 0.048, OR = 1.667). Furthermore, a slight positive correlation was identified between the amount of time individuals spent on the Internet and the severity of headaches (r = 0.138, r = 0.019, ß = 1.068, = 0.049). Patients with migraine or tension-type headache showed different predecessors, internet use was only associated with the severity of tension-type headache (night-time internet use, OR = 3.075, = 0.043, and internet addiction, OR = 1.221, = 0.003).
This research marks one of the initial epidemiological investigations in Hungary concentrating on the possible adverse impact of online activities on the severity of headache. Although our study could find slight correlation between the role of online activities and internet addiction on the severity of primary headaches, the topic merits further investigation.
近期研究表明,数字技术使用的增加可能是头痛发作频率上升和严重程度加剧的一个因素。本横断面研究的目的是在考虑多种协变量的情况下,确定原发性头痛(偏头痛和紧张型头痛)的严重程度是否与有问题的互联网使用有关。
我们使用定量描述性问卷进行了一项在线横断面调查,目标是年龄在18至65岁的参加函授课程的大学生。调查内容包括社会人口统计学参数、危险因素、伴随疾病、头痛病史以及在线活动细节。心理测量指标包括问题性互联网使用问卷、9项简短版贝克抑郁量表(BDI-SF)和雅典失眠问卷。
共有550名应答者(480名女性;70名男性)完成了在线问卷包。在参与者中,202人(36.7%)报告有头痛经历,74人有偏头痛,119人有紧张型头痛。46名(8.4%)参与者被检测出有网络成瘾问题。多变量方差分析(MANOVA)显示,所有原发性头痛严重程度的显著危险因素包括年龄<30岁(P = 0.044,OR = 3.439)、没有孩子(P = 0.014,OR = 2.493)、已婚(P = 0.035,OR = 2.528)、每天上网时间超过4小时(P = 0.021,OR = 1.088)、有情绪障碍(P = 0.033,OR = 1.345)以及存在失眠(P = 0.048,OR = 1.667)。此外,个体上网时间与头痛严重程度之间存在轻微正相关(r = 0.138,P = 0.019,β = 1.068,P = 0.049)。偏头痛或紧张型头痛患者表现出不同的前驱因素,互联网使用仅与紧张型头痛的严重程度相关(夜间上网,OR = 3.075,P = 0.043,以及网络成瘾,OR = 1.221,P = 0.003)。
本研究是匈牙利最初的流行病学调查之一,重点关注在线活动对头痛严重程度可能产生的不利影响。尽管我们的研究发现在线活动和网络成瘾在原发性头痛严重程度方面存在轻微关联,但该主题仍值得进一步研究。