Late Post-Traumatic Headache in Pediatric Age
- 1 December 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Cephalalgia
- Vol. 5 (4) , 211-215
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1468-2982.1985.0504211.x
Abstract
In this study we evaluate the incidence and clinical characteristics of headache which arise 12–18 months after a cranial trauma in a pediatric age group of subjects. We contacted 217 individuals who had been hospitalized for head injury to return for check-up; of the 138 who responded, there were 86 males and 52 females (mean 9.2 years). The responders were given a complete physical and neurological examination and, in the presence of at least one parent, asked to fill out a headache questionnaire. Twenty-nine per cent suffered from headache, and in 6.5% the headache was migrainous in nature. The 138 patients were split up into three sub-classes in accordance with the nature of the trauma and two sub-classes in accordance with the presence or absence of fractures. The results were then compared with those obtained from a control population (246 patients with a mean age of 8.8 years). An increased headache frequency was found in those patients with average to severe trauma. We conclude that cranial trauma is not likely to be followed by headache unless accompanied by loss of consciousness and/or focal neurological signs.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Migraine as a sequela of blunt head injuryInjury, 1977
- Posttraumatic Dysautonomic CephalalgiaArchives of Neurology, 1975
- Concussion and Contusion of the Brain and Their SequelaePublished by Springer Nature ,1974
- PSYCHIATRIC SEQUELAE OF MINOR HEAD INJURYBrain, 1972
- Children and the Post-Concussion SyndromeJAMA, 1961
- PROGNOSIS IN HEAD INJURIES IN CHILDRENJournal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 1956
- Migraine in ChildrenInternational Archives of Allergy and Immunology, 1955
- Analysis of 1,400 Cases of Acute Injury to the HeadBMJ, 1954
- Studies on Headache: Mechanisms of Chronic Posttraumatic Headache*Psychosomatic Medicine, 1946
- DISABILITY ARISING FROM CLOSED HEAD INJURYJAMA, 1945