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1.
Increased pericranial muscle tenderness is connected with tension-type headache in adults. In children, the importance of muscle tenderness in the pericranial or neck-shoulder region in the pathogenesis of different types of headache is unknown. The present study evaluated muscle tenderness in the pericranial and neck-shoulder region in children with migraine, those with tension-type headache and those without headache. An unselected population-based questionnaire study concerning headache was carried out in 1135 Finnish schoolchildren aged 12 years. Of them, 183 children were randomly selected for a face-to-face interview and a clinical examination. Muscle tenderness was recorded by manual palpation and dolorimeter. Children with migraine had increased overall tenderness, recorded by manual palpation, compared with those without headache. They also self-reported tenderness in the neck-shoulder region during daily activities more often than the children of the other groups. Muscle tenderness was not associated with paediatric tension-type headache. The mean pressure pain thresholds did not differ among the three groups. However, a negative correlation between the total tenderness score and the dolorimeter score was found in each group. In conclusion, children with migraine had increased muscle tenderness at palpation of the pericranial and neck-shoulder muscles and they also reported pain symptoms in the neck-shoulder region most frequently. Instead, increased pericranial and neck-shoulder muscle tenderness was not associated with tension-type headache in children.  相似文献   

2.
Background Sensitisation of the pain detection system has been suggested to be involved in the pathogenesis of recurrent headache. In adults, increased sensitivity to pain has been found in patients with chronic tension type headache. Children with migraine or with unspecific headache report non‐headache pains and interictal pericranial muscular tenderness more often than headache‐free children. Objective To study if children with different types of headache report non‐headache pain more often than children with no headache and if extracephalic muscular tenderness is different in children with headache in comparison to headache‐free children. To find out if interval to the headache episode has influence on the extracranial muscular tenderness. Design A population‐based sample of 13‐year‐old children with migraine (n = 48), episodic tension type headache (61) or no headache (59) were interviewed for the occurrence and characteristics of headache and fulfilled a questionnaire on non‐headache pain. A structured manual palpation test on muscular tenderness and a pain threshold measurement were done on seven cephalic and three extracephalic points. Results Children with migraine reported other pains, especially stomach pain and limb pain more often than children with episodic tension type or no headache. There were no significant differences in the extracephalic muscular tenderness or in the pressure pain thresholds between the three groups. Conclusions Children with migraine experience more non‐headache pains than children with episodic tension type headache and with no headache. However, neither children with migraine nor children with episodic tension type headache show increased interictal extracephalic muscular sensitivity for palpation.  相似文献   

3.
Ashina M  Bendtsen L  Jensen R  Sakai F  Olesen J 《Pain》1999,79(2-3):201-205
It has recently been reported that the pericranial muscles in patients with chronic tension-type headache are harder, i.e. have a higher consistency, than in controls. The primary aim of the present study was to investigate whether muscle hardness is influenced by the presence or absence of actual headache and whether hardness is correlated to tenderness. The secondary aim was to compare muscle hardness between patients and healthy controls. Hardness of the trapezius muscle was measured with a hardness meter in 20 patients with chronic tension-type headache and in 20 healthy controls. The patients were examined on 2 days, 1 day with headache and 1 day without headache. Pericranial myofascial tenderness was recorded with manual palpation. In addition, muscle hardness was measured in another five patients out-side headache and in 30 healthy controls. The muscle hardness recorded in patients (n = 20) on days with headache, 98 +/- 26 kPa/cm, did not differ significantly from the muscle hardness recorded on days without headache, 100 +/- 21 kPa/cm, (P = 0.62). The muscle hardness was positively correlated to the local tenderness score recorded from the trapezius muscle both on days with headache (R = 0.52, P = 0.02) and on days without headache (R = 0.53, P = 0.02). The total tenderness score (TTS) recorded in patients on days with headache, 23 +/- 10, was significantly higher than the TTS recorded on days without headache, 15 +/- 11, (P = 0.0001). There was a significant difference between the TTS recorded in patients without headache, 15 +/- 11, and in controls, 4 +/- 4, (P = 0.002). The muscle hardness was significantly higher in patients on days without headache (n = 25), 97 +/- 20 kPa/cm, than in controls (n = 30), 87 +/- 16 kPa/cm (P = 0.03). On basis of previous and present results, we suggest that muscle hardness and muscle tenderness are permanently altered in chronic tension-type headache and not only a consequence of actual pain. In addition, the positive correlation between muscle hardness and tenderness supports the common clinical observation that tender muscles are harder than normal muscles.  相似文献   

4.
SYNOPSIS
The purpose of this study was to examine the possible association of signs and symptoms of temporomandibular disorders relative to headache. Fifty-six sequential patients referred to the Headache Institute of Minnesota for evaluation and treatment of migraine and tension headaches were examined for signs and symptoms of temporomandibular disorders. The results of the examination of headache patients were compared to patients suffering from myofascial pain dysfunction and/or TMJ internal derangements from the TMJ and Craniofacial Pain Clinic at the University of Minnesota. Finally the migraine and tension headache patients were compared to each other and an asymptomatic population.
Results indicate that patients with temporomandibular disorders exhibit significantly more jaw dysfunction and pericranial muscle tenderness than migraine and tension headache patients. Migraine and tension headache patients were found to have similar amounts of pericranial muscle tenderness. Migraine and tension headache patients exhibited significantly more pericranial and neck muscle tenderness than a general population.  相似文献   

5.
Friedman MH 《Headache》2004,44(8):767-771
OBJECTIVE: To demonstrate the relationship of migraine and tension-type headache to a localized maxillary gingival inflammation. BACKGROUND: Intraoral tenderness has been observed consistently in the most common types of primary headache disorders. The laterality and degree of tenderness is related to laterality and severity of reported symptoms, both during headache and in the interictal state. METHODS: Bilateral posterior maxillary palpation and local temperature recordings were performed during unilateral migraine and tension-type headache. Local anti-inflammatory techniques, ie, local chilling and a topical anti-inflammatory gel, were used in these tender areas in episodic migraine and tension-type headache patients. RESULTS: Ipsilateral intraoral tenderness and increased local temperature were consistently observed during unilateral migraine and tension-type headache, suggesting local inflammation. Intraoral chilling and topical application of a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug were highly effective for the treatment of migraine and tension-type headache, both in the acute phase and for headache prevention. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that a local intraoral inflammation may be associated with the pathogenesis of these common headaches.  相似文献   

6.
Clinical Characterization of Patients with Chronic Tension Headache   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
SYNOPSIS
One hundred and forty-eight patients with tension headaches at least 10 days per month were studied prospectively with a standardized interview, neurological examination and evaluation of muscle tenderness and jaw movements. Patients with migraine attacks oftener than once per month were excluded. Ninety-three had daily headache. Median age at onset was 23 yrs. (quartiles 15–23 yrs.). Half of the patients had headache predominating in one part of the head. In the other half, headache was diffuse or with changing pattern. Fifty-eight reported migraine attacks 1–12 times per year; twenty-seven of these did not remember onset, 15 initially had migraine later developing into chronic headache, and 16 started with tension headache and developed migraine attacks later in life. Photophobia was reported as frequently associated with tension headache (migraine attacks not included) in 13 percent, infrequently in 38 percent and absent in 49 percent. Corresponding figures for phonophobia were 7, 35 and 57 percent. Characteristics of chronic tension headache were similar in patients with and without migraine attacks. The components included in the usual indices of temporo-mandibular joint dysfunction showed little mutual correlation. Pericranial tenderness scores were elevated compared to previously studied controls. Tenderness in paravertebral muscles was significantly correlated to pericranial tenderness, and patients indicating influence by environmental factors had the highest pericranial tenderness scores. The findings are suggestive of a generalized muscular reaction to environmental stress in the majority of patients.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of 30 min voluntary toothclenching was studied in 48 patients with common migraine, randomized in two groups. Group 1 performed low-level tension at 5% and group 2, high-level tension at 30% of the individual maximum, as judged by surface EMG from the temporal muscle. Pericranial muscle tenderness was evaluated by manual palpation and a four-point verbal scale. Headache, nausea, and soreness of the chewing muscles were scored on visual analogue scales. Although surface EMG, soreness, blood pressure, heart rate and difficulty in completing the toothclenching session all showed that group 2 patients were subjected to significantly higher levels of muscle tension than group 1 patients, headache developed equally often in both groups (63%). Headache was even more pronounced in group 1 (n.s.). Five patients in group 1 and none in group 2 developed an attack of migraine during the following 24 h. Pericranial muscle tenderness was unaffected by the experimental procedure. There was no significant correlation between headache intensity and pericranial muscle tenderness. Muscle ischemia, muscle "fatigue", and strain on muscle insertions are thus unlikely to cause attacks of common migraine.  相似文献   

8.
Hyperbaric Oxygen in the Treatment of Migraine With Aura   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Cephalalgia is one of the most common medical complaints and the search continues for relief. Early treatments for migraine included inhalation of 100% oxygen. It has been theorized that the increased levels of oxygen in the blood act as an alpha-adrenergic agent to alleviate headache pain through vasoconstriction and local metabolic effects. The presence of muscle tenderness during some migraine headaches has also been established. The purpose of this study was to document relief of cephalalgia through use of a visual analog pain scale, algometry, and manual palpation. Female subjects with confirmed migraine were randomly assigned to begin with either the control (100% oxygen, no pressure) or hyperbaric treatment (100% oxygen, pressure). Manual palpation and algometry of 10 sites were done, bilaterally, by a trained specialist. Pain was evaluated with a visual analog scale. Resolution of tenderness and edema following both treatments was observable by manual palpation while algometry showed no differences between the two. Subjective pain was significantly decreased following hyperbaric oxygen treatment but not following the control treatment. Results suggest that hyperbaric oxygen treatment reduces migraine headache pain and that the patient's subjective assessment was the best indicator of relief.  相似文献   

9.
Some types of primary headaches and temporomandibular disorders (TMD) are comorbid in adults and highly prevalent in adolescents. Herein, we investigated the association of painful TMD with specific headache diagnoses (migraine, tension-type headache) and with headache frequency in adolescents. We also explored the association of headache diagnosis with the number of painful sites in the trigeminal area. Painful TMD was assessed using the Research Diagnostic Criteria for TMD. We conducted a case-control study of adolescents from 13 to 15 years old who were recruited among participants in a previous epidemiologic study conducted in Araraquara, SP, Brazil. Headaches were classified according to the second edition of the International Classification for Headache Disorders. Logistic, multinomial logistic and linear regression models were used to test associations. Of 149 individuals, 55.7% presented painful TMD. Adolescents with painful TMD (cases) were more likely to have migraine compared with those without TMD (controls; odds ratio = 3.0, 95% confidence interval = 1.47–6.19, P = .033). Significant differences were not observed for probable tension-type headache (P = .307) or tension-type headache (P = .834). Painful TMD was also associated with an increase in headache frequency (linear-by-linear association = 8.051; P = .005). Only migraine was associated with a greater number of painful sites on palpation in the trigeminal area (P = .001). Migraine and frequency of headache were associated with painful TMD in adolescents.PerspectiveMigraine and headache frequency were strongly associated with painful TMD in adolescents, and causality must be determined. For now, the presence of 1 condition should raise suspicion of the other and warrants collaboration between orofacial pain specialists and neurologists.  相似文献   

10.
According to International Headache Society classification criteria, the presence of pericranial muscle disorder in tension-type headache should be evaluated using one of the following methods: EMG, pressure algometry or manual palpation. The purpose of this study was to compare the results of these three methods in 15 patients with episodic tension-type headache, 29 with chronic tension-type headache and 22 presenting migraine without aura compared to those obtained in healthy individuals. Algometric and EMG recordings at the frontalis muscle during mental arithmetic were more impaired in episodic and chronic tension headache patients than in controls and migraine patients. Chronic tension headache patients were significantly impaired at the trapezius muscle in all three tests compared to controls. Our data indicate that when two or three tests were carried out the diagnostic capacity was significantly improved in comparison to only one test. Moreover, since a different pattern could be seen with pain and without pain, the existence of headache at the time of testing should be taken into consideration.  相似文献   

11.
Muscular disorders in tension-type headache   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
In order to evaluate the diagnostic criteria for muscular disorders in tension-type headache, pericranial muscle tenderness and pressure pain thresholds were studied in a random sample population of 735 adults aged 25–64. In addition, quantitative EMGs were recorded in 547 of these subjects. The correlation between the three diagnostic tests was assessed and the discriminality and cut-off points were analysed using Receiver Operating Characteristics analysis. Local tenderness from the temporal muscles was closely related to the total tenderness scores from 14 pairs of muscles. In chronic tension-type headache, tenderness was positively related to EMG and inversely related to pain thresholds. In the episodic form the total tenderness score was inversely related to pain thresholds, whereas no significant relation to EMG was noted. The Receiver Operating Characteristics curves indicated that tenderness recorded by manual palpation was the most specific and sensitive test, whereas EMG and pain thresholds were of limited diagnostic value. Eighty-seven percent of subjects with the chronic, and 66% of subjects with the episodic form were found to have a "muscular disorder" defined as increased tenderness recorded by either manual palpation or pressure algometry and/or increased EMG levels. However, muscle tenderness increased significantly during pain, so the headache state should be considered in future studies. Suggestions for revision of the present diagnostic criteria for muscular disorders are given.  相似文献   

12.
The role of psychological factors related to headache has long been a focus of investigation. The aim of this study was to evaluate anxiety, depression, hostility and psychological symptoms in patients with migraine and tension-type headache (TTH) and to compare the results with healthy controls. Seventy-five subjects with migraine and 55 subjects with TTH (according to the criteria of the International Headache Society classification) and a control group including 73 healthy subjects were studied. The Buss-Durkee Hostility Inventory, Brief Symptom Inventory, State-trait Anxiety Inventory, Trait form were administered to the subjects. Compared with healthy controls, the patients with headache had significantly higher scores on measures of anxiety, depression and hostility and lower scores on psychological symptoms. The present results indicate the need to distinguish the unique dimensions of anxiety, depression and hostility that should be assessed in the population with headaches.  相似文献   

13.
Migraine is characterized by an elevated contingent negative variation (CNV) in adults and children. In the present study the movement-related potential preceding self-initiated movements, the Bereitschaftspotential, was investigated in 30 children (mean age 12 years) who were suffering from migraine and tension-type headache and in 16 healthy age-matched controls. Children pressed a button 80 times with the right index finger while movement-related potentials were recorded from frontal and central electrodes. Whereas healthy children evidenced positive movement-related potentials at left and midline positions, children with migraine and tension-type headache showed negative movement-related potentials at midline leads without lateralization. Negativity was even more pronounced in cases of migraine with than without aura symptoms.  相似文献   

14.
Pericranial tenderness in tension headache   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:3  
Forty patients with tension headache and 40 healthy comparable control persons were palpated by the same "blinded" observer. Tenderness in 10 pericranial muscles on each side was rated on a four-point scale. A Total Tenderness Score was calculated for each individual by adding the scores from all palpated areas. Headache patients had significantly higher scores than controls and also significantly higher tenderness in each point separately. Median normal values and confidence limits for tenderness are given. Among 23 patients with daily headache a correlation was found between headache intensity and Total Tenderness Score. It is likely that the pathologic tenderness in patients with tension headache is the source of nociception, but pain mechanisms are more complex, as evidenced by discrepancy between tenderness and pain in some patients. Pathologic tenderness should be a contributing criterion to the diagnosis of tension headache (muscle contraction headache).  相似文献   

15.

Background

Most knowledge on chronic tension-type headache (CTTH) is based on data from selected clinic populations, while data from the general population is sparse. Since pericranial tenderness is found to be the most prominent finding in CTTH, we wanted to explore the relationship between CTTH and pericranial muscle tenderness in a population-based sample.

Methods

An age- and gender-stratified random sample of 30,000 persons aged 30-44 years from the general population received a mailed questionnaire. Those with a self-reported chronic headache were interviewed and examined by neurological residents. The questionnaire response rate was 71% and the interview participation rate was 74%. The International Classification of Headache Disorders II was used. Pericranial muscle tenderness was assessed by a total tenderness score (TTS) involving 8 pairs of muscles and tendon insertions. Cross-sectional data from the Danish general population using the same scoring system were used for comparison.

Results

The tenderness scores were significantly higher in women than men in all muscle groups. The TTS was significantly higher in those with co-occurrence of migraine compared with those without; 19.3 vs. 16.8, p = 0.02. Those with bilateral CTTH had a significantly higher TTS than those with unilateral CTTH. The TTS decreased significantly with age. People with CTTH had a significantly higher TTS compared to the general population.

Conclusions

People with CTTH have increased pericranial tenderness. Elevated tenderness scores are associated with co-occurrence of migraine, bilateral headache and low age.Whether the increased muscle tenderness is primary or secondary to the headache should be addressed by future studies.  相似文献   

16.
K Jensen  C Tuxen  J Olesen 《Pain》1988,35(1):65-70
Twenty-six patients were examined during attacks of common migraine as well as during headache-free interval. Pericranial tenderness was scored blindly by a systematic manual palpation on both occasions by the same observer. Pressure-pain threshold (PPT) in a fixed location over the temporal muscle was determined by the use of a pressure algometer. A 28% increase in total tenderness score was observed during attacks (P less than 0.01). During unilateral attacks, tenderness scores were significantly higher on the ipsilateral side as compared to the contralateral (P less than 0.01). A positive correlation was observed between tenderness on the two sides (P less than 0.05) and the two occasions (P less than 0.01). PPT showed no changes during migraine attacks and there was no difference in PPT between the ipsilateral and contralateral side. A positive correlation was observed between PPT on the two sides and the two occasions (P less than 0.01). PPT was not correlated to the tenderness scores obtained by manual palpation. The absence of a decrease in PPT and the presence of several tender areas in multiple regions, particularly where pain was spontaneously reported to be located, suggest the presence of either a multi-focal peripheral pathological process or referred pain from other structures in the head and neck region.  相似文献   

17.
SYNOPSIS
The purpose of the present study was to examine symptom configurations experienced by children with problem headache and to determine whether headache symptoms in children can be analyzed along a continuum of severity. Forty-seven children between the ages of 8 and 17 years monitored their headache activity on a daily basis for a 3-week period. The self-observation data indicated that children did not show a tendency to experience their headache symptoms in terms of distinct muscle contraction and migraine symptom clusters. On the contrary, both categories of symptoms were observed to increase in frequency with increasingly problematic headaches. The presence of both muscle contraction and migraine symptoms increased in a linear fashion with the number of daily headache hours reported by the children during the self-observation period. The measure of headache hours also correlated significantly with the total number of head pain locations and symptoms reported by the children. A regression analysis revealed that the symptom of nausea with the addition of the symptoms of dull and aching pain, bilateral forehead pain, feelings of tightness and pressure, and light sensitivity accounted for 77% of the variance associated with the severity measure of headache hours. Further support for viewing headaches in children in terms of severity came from an analysis of the time of onset of headache activity characteristic of the different children in the sample. Children with more severe headache activity experienced their attacks at an earlier time of day than children with less severe headache activity. Overall, the self-observation data provided additional support for the severity model and supported the utility of extending the model to the study of headache disorders in children.  相似文献   

18.
Pericranial tenderness is not related to nummular headache   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The aim of the present study was to investigate whether nummular headache (NH) patients show increased pericranial tenderness in relation to healthy subjects, and to compare pericranial tenderness between both NH and chronic tension-type headache (CTTH) patients. Three tenderness (total, cephalic and neck) scores were objectively and blinded assessed in 10 NH patients, 10 CTTH subjects and 10 healthy matched controls. No significant differences were found in any tenderness score between the symptomatic and non-symptomatic sides in NH, or between right and left sides in either CTTH or control groups. All tenderness scores were significantly greater in CTTH patients compared with both NH patients and controls (P < 0.001), but not significantly different between NH patients and controls. Therefore, NH patients had lower tenderness than patients with CTTH and did not show increased tenderness when compared with healthy subjects. In addition, tenderness in NH patients was quite symmetrical between both the symptomatic and the non-symptomatic sides. The absence of increased pericranial tenderness could be clinically useful in distinguishing NH from CTTH. Current findings expand the evidence supporting the notion that NH is a non-generalized and rather limited disorder, marking the presence of a well-delimited painful zone.  相似文献   

19.

Background

Association between sleep disorders and headache is largely known. The aim of the present study was to evaluate sleep quality and quantity in a large cohort of primary headache patients, in order to correlate these scores with symptoms of central sensitization as allodynia, pericranial tenderness and comorbidity with diffuse muscle-skeletal pain.

Methods

One thousand six hundreds and seventy primary headache out patients were submitted to the Medical Outcomes Study (MOS) within a clinical assessment, consisting of evaluation of frequency of headache, pericranial tenderness, allodynia and coexistence of fibromyalgia syndrome (FM).

Results

Ten groups of primary headache patients were individuated, including patients with episodic and chronic migraine and tension type headache, mixed forms, cluster headache and other trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias. Duration but not sleep disturbances score was correlated with symptoms of central sensitization as allodynia and pericranial tenderness in primary headache patients. The association among allodynia, pericranial tenderness and short sleep characterized chronic migraine more than any other primary headache form. Patients presenting with FM comorbidity suffered from sleep disturbances in addition to reduction of sleep duration.

Conclusion

Self reported duration of sleep seems a useful index to be correlated with allodynia, pericranial tenderness and chronic headache as a therapeutic target to be assessed in forthcoming studies aiming to prevent central sensitization symptoms development.  相似文献   

20.
To examine indices of behavioural and emotional problems and temperamental traits in clinically referred children and adolescents suffering from tension headache or migraine. Headache in childhood and adolescence (<18 years) has been associated with the presence of behavioural and emotional difficulties, but limited data are available on the relationship between these problems and different types of headache. Clinically referred children and adolescents (N=114), 6-16 years of age, suffering from primary headache according to the diagnostic criteria of the International Headache Society, 47 with tension-type headache (TH) and 67 with migraine (M), and 36 normal controls without headache (NC) were assessed using the Parent Child Behaviour Checklist (CBCL), Children's Depression Inventory (CDI), Multidimensional Anxiety Scale for Children (MASC), Conner's Parent Rating Scale (CPRS), and Emotionality-Activity-Sociability-Shyness Scale (EAS). Psychological and personality self-rating assessments were obtained also on the children's parents and siblings. Although most headache patients had scores within the normative non-pathological range, both TH and M patients had higher CBCL total, internalizing, and externalizing scores than NC (P<0.001), and TH patients had higher scores than M patients. TH and M had higher CDI and MASC scores than NC (P<0.05), with no difference between the headache groups. TH patients had higher Emotionality and Shyness scores, and lower Sociability scores than M patients. Clinically referred children and adolescents with TH and M had higher scores of behavioural and emotional symptoms, both of internalizing and externalizing type, than normal peers. The TH group had greater psychological and temperamental difficulties than the M group.  相似文献   

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