Headaches Alter Lives of Kids

Study finds they have persistent pain as disabling as arthritis or cancer

(HealthDay is the new name for HealthScoutNews.)

MONDAY, July 7, 2003 (HealthDayNews) -- For children and teens, migraines can affect their quality of life as much as having arthritis or even cancer, a new study finds.

Researchers from Cincinnati Children's Hospital Headache Center evaluated 572 youths between 2 and 18 years of age who had come to the center for treatment, asking them and their parents how their headaches affected their daily life. Of this group, 99 percent had a migraine diagnosis and 40 percent of those had migraines termed "chronic daily headaches," says study author Scott W. Powers, co-director of the headache center.

The findings are published in the July issue of Pediatrics.

Powers and his colleagues then compared the children with headaches to groups of 730 healthy children, 339 children with cancer such as leukemia and 271 children with rheumatologic diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis. All youngsters and their parents (or just the parents in the case of the 2- to 4-year-olds) were asked about their quality of life in four areas of functioning: physical, emotional, social and educational.

"Compared to the normal children, they had a lower quality of life, both based on their own report and their parents' report of their perception of the child," Powers says of those with headaches. Overall, the total score for healthy children was 83 (of 100 possible), but just 73 for headache sufferers.

When compared with children with cancer and rheumatologic disease, the children with migraines had more problems with school and emotional functioning. But they had higher physical and social functioning, the researchers found.

Parents of the children with headaches reported lower educational and emotional functioning compared with the parents of children with rheumatologic disease, but not when compared with the parents of children with cancer.Social functioning was the least different, Powers says. "Social activities engage the brain [and] are distracting," Powers says. "In general, a kid having a migraine might try to engage in social activities; it's easier than sitting in an algebra class."

While some might argue there's no comparison in the quality of life of a child with cancer to one who suffers migraines, Powers explains they decided to compare children with cancer, rheumatoid conditions and migraine headaches because all are chronic illnesses.

"Migraine can be debilitating," says Sharon Wells, a Mesa, Ariz., resident whose son, Tony, died of Hodgkin's disease. Comparing the quality of life of children with migraines to those who have cancer or rheumatoid conditions makes a little more sense to her, she says, than previous research which compared the quality of life of obese children with that of children with cancer.

But, she adds, "I don't put migraines on the same level as cancer."

To Powers, the study results provide some insight into a childhood condition that he says is prevalent and under-recognized. Published studies have shown that about one in 10 children and one in four teens have headaches, he says.

Sometimes, children are seen by several doctors who suspect other diagnoses before the correct one is made, Powers says. At the center, he says, doctors see about 400 new patients a year. "Their average age is 11, and many of them have had headaches since they were 8," he says.

Dr. Seymour Diamond, director of the Diamond Headache Clinic in Chicago and a professor of family medicine at Chicago Medical School, praises the new research. "It's a good study," he says. "It really stresses the importance of the disability and the effects and how it alters the lives of these kids."

"The finding that really surprised me," he adds, "was the comparison of kids with cancer and with rheumatoid arthritis." That finding proves that youngsters with headache are really suffering, he says, "and it really emphasizes what I have known for years: That there is a lot of disability and a lot of quality-of-life factors in children having migraines."

At the Cincinnati Headache Center, Powers says, everyone gets suggestions on how to manage their lifestyle to minimize attacks. Among the suggestions: Drink plenty of water, get enough sleep, eat regularly and get regular exercise.

More information

For information on childhood headaches, see the American Council for Headache Education or KidsHealth.

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