Are you a Health Professional? Jump over to the doctors only platform. Click Here

Chronic Migraine Strongly Linked with Analgesic Overuse

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Chronic migraine is more strongly linked to analgesic overuse than are other chronic pain conditions, such as neck and low-back pain, according to a new report.

Chronic migraine is more strongly linked to analgesic overuse than are other chronic pain conditions, such as neck and low-back pain, according to a new report. The findings are based on a study of more than 49,000 subjects in Norway who completed questionnaires about chronic pain conditions and analgesic use. Overall, 1 percent of subjects who used analgesics daily or almost daily for at least 1 month reported having a chronic headache, defined as 15 or more days per month with headache, lead author Dr. J.-A. Zwart, from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim, and colleagues note. Among subjects who reported analgesic overuse for at least 3 months, the prevalence of chronic headache was 0.9 percent. The rate in women was 1.2 percent, double that seen in men. Analgesic overuse for at least 1 month increased the risk of chronic headache 7.5-fold, the authors note in the medical journal Neurology. Among various chronic pain conditions, analgesic overuse was most strongly linked to chronic migraine, followed by non-migraine headache, low-back pain, and neck-pain. Compared with subjects who used analgesic appropriately, overusers were10.3-times more likely to report chronic migraine. “This is the first study reporting the age and gender distribution of chronic headache associated with analgesic overuse in a general population,” the researchers note. “The high number of individuals with analgesic overuse has important clinical implications, and physicians should be aware of the potential risk of analgesic overuse among those with chronic pain, especially among those with migraine.” (SOURCE: Neurology: Norwegian University of Science and Technology: Reuters Health News: May 2004.)


Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Dates

Posted On: 21 May, 2004
Modified On: 5 December, 2013

Tags



Created by: myVMC