Nazia Karsan (London/ GB), Helin Gosalia (London/ GB), Peter J. Goadsby (London/ GB), Prab Prabhakar (London/ GB)
Abstract text (incl. figure legends and references)
Question
We set out to perform prospective extended phenotyping of children presenting to a tertiary headache service.
Methods
Consecutive new migraineurs presenting to the Children"s Headache Clinic at Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children between 6th January- 6th September 2022 were included (n=51). A detailed headache history was taken at the first consultation by a trained headache physician. A questionnaire was used to ensure complete symptomatic capture. Data were tabulated and analysed (IBM SPSS v 28). Descriptive statistics, Chi-square and Pearson correlation analyses were used. Significance was assessed at P < 0.05.
Results
Patients were 69% female and aged 8-16 years (mean 13, SD 2), with mean disease duration 5 years (SD 3). Baseline monthly headache frequency was 1-30 days (median 30, IQR 10-30). Chronic migraine was the most common diagnosis (61%). Aura was present in 45%. At least one infantile migraine marker was present in 71%; the most common were travel sickness (45%) and colic (41%). At least one premonitory symptom (PS) was reported by 94%, at least one cranial autonomic symptom (CAS) by 71% and premonitory CAS by 18%. Vertigo, allodynia and neck stiffness were also reported. The most common perceived triggers were stress (43%), concentration (22%) and bright lights (22%). CAS and headache lateralities co-associated (ꭓ2 15, P=0.005). There was a positive correlation between disease duration and the number of PS reported (Pearson correlation coefficient 0.3, P=0.026). There was a negative correlation between gestational age at birth and number of PS reported (Pearson correlation coefficient -0.4, P=0.009).
Conclusion
The extended paediatric migraine phenotype includes several non-canonical migraine symptoms. Similarly to in adults, CAS can occur prior to headache and tend to lateralise with headache. There may be an association of PS with disease chronicity and a suggestion that prematurity is associated with more PS.
Auf unserem Internetauftritt verwenden wir Cookies. Bei Cookies handelt es sich um kleine (Text-)Dateien, die auf Ihrem Endgerät (z.B. Smartphone, Notebook, Tablet, PC) angelegt und gespeichert werden. Einige dieser Cookies sind technisch notwendig um die Webseite zu betreiben, andere Cookies dienen dazu die Funktionalität der Webseite zu erweitern oder zu Marketingzwecken. Abgesehen von den technisch notwendigen Cookies, steht es Ihnen frei Cookies beim Besuch unserer Webseite zuzulassen oder nicht.