scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Comorbidity of depressive and anxiety disorders in chronic daily headache and its subtypes.

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The frequency of depressive and anxiety disorders in patients with chronic daily headache is studied to investigate the frequency of these disorders.
Abstract
Objective.—To investigate the frequency of depressive and anxiety disorders in patients with chronic daily headache. Background.—There is a lack of data in the literature on the extent of psychiatric comorbidity in patients with different subtypes of chronic daily headache. Methods.—We recruited consecutive patients with chronic daily headache seen in a headache clinic from November 1998 to December 1999. The subtypes of chronic daily headache were classified according to the criteria proposed by Silberstein et al. A psychiatrist evaluated the patients according to the structured Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview to assess the comorbidity of depressive and anxiety disorders. Results.—Two hundred sixty-one patients with chronic daily headache were recruited. The mean age was 46 years, and 80% were women. Transformed migraine was diagnosed in 152 patients (58%) and chronic tension-type headache in 92 patients (35%). Seventy-eight percent of patients with transformed migraine had psychiatric comorbidity, including major depression (57%), dysthymia (11%), panic disorder (30%), and generalized anxiety disorder (8%). Sixty-four percent of patients with chronic tension-type headache had psychiatric diagnoses, including major depression (51%), dysthymia (8%), panic disorder (22%), and generalized anxiety disorder (1%). The frequency of anxiety disorders was significantly higher in patients with transformed migraine after controlling for age and sex (P = .02). Both depressive and anxiety disorders were significantly more frequent in women. Conclusion.—Psychiatric comorbidity, especially major depression and panic disorders, was highly prevalent in patients with chronic daily headache seen in a headache clinic. These results demonstrate that women and patients with transformed migraine are at higher risk of psychiatric comorbidity.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Sociodemographic and comorbidity profiles of chronic migraine and episodic migraine sufferers

TL;DR: Sociodemographic and comorbidity profiles of the CM population differ from the EM population on multiple dimensions, suggesting that CM and EM differ in important ways other than headache frequency.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reliability and validity of Japanese version of the Mini‐International Neuropsychiatric Interview

TL;DR: The results suggest that the MINI Japanese version succeeds in reliably and validly eliciting symptom criteria used in making DSM‐III‐R diagnoses, and can be performed in less than half the time required for the SCID‐P.
Journal ArticleDOI

Incidence and predictors for chronicity of headache in patients with episodic migraine

TL;DR: The authors followed 532 consecutive patients with episodic migraine (<15 days/month) for 1 year andixty-four patients (14%) developed chronic headache (CH), with odds ratios higher in patients with and without medication overuse.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prevalence of depressive and anxiety disorders in an assisted reproductive technique clinic

TL;DR: Depressive and anxiety disorders were highly prevalent among women who visited an assisted reproduction clinic for a new course of the treatment, and Demographic features and a history of previous assisted reproduction treatment were not risk factors for these psychiatric morbidities in theassisted reproduction clinic.
Journal ArticleDOI

Migraine and psychiatric comorbidity: a review of clinical findings

TL;DR: This review has mainly considered the findings from general population studies and studies on clinical samples, in adults and children, focusing on the association between migraine and psychiatric disorders (axis I of the DSM), carried over after the first classification of IHS (1988).
References
More filters
Journal Article

The Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview (M.I.N.I.) : The development and validation of a Structured Diagnostic Psychiatric Interview for DSM-IV and ICD-10

TL;DR: The Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview is designed to meet the need for a short but accurate structured psychiatric interview for multicenter clinical trials and epidemiology studies and to be used as a first step in outcome tracking in nonresearch clinical settings.
Journal ArticleDOI

The mini international neuropsychiatric interview

TL;DR: The results are interpreted as a support for the hypothesis that language-related brain functions are deficient in subgroups of schizophrenia and might be associated with compensatory contralateral activation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cross-national epidemiology of major depression and bipolar disorder

TL;DR: There are striking similarities across countries in patterns of major depression and of bipolar disorder and the differences in rates for major depression across countries suggest that cultural differences or different risk factors affect the expression of the disorder.
Journal ArticleDOI

Classification of daily and near-daily headaches: Field trial of revised IHS criteria

TL;DR: Primary chronic daily headache can be subdivided into transformed migraine, chronic tension-type headache, hemicrania continua, and new daily persistent headache.
Related Papers (5)