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Prevalence of migraine in patients with a history of self-reported or physician-diagnosed "sinus" headache.
Arch Intern Med. 2004 Sep 13; 164(16):1769-72.AI

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Symptoms referable to the sinus area are frequently reported during migraine attacks, but are not recognized in diagnostic criteria. Underrecognition of migraine may be partly attributed to a variable clinical presentation, and migraines with "sinus" symptoms contribute to this problem. This study was conducted to determine the prevalence of migraine-type headache (International Headache Society [IHS]-defined migraine without aura [IHS 1.1], migraine with aura [IHS 1.2], or migrainous disorder [IHS 1.7]) in patients with a history of self-described or physician-diagnosed "sinus" headache.

METHODS

During a clinic visit, patients with a history of "sinus" headache, no previous diagnosis of migraine, and no evidence of infection were assigned an IHS headache diagnosis on the basis of headache histories and reported symptoms.

RESULTS

A total of 2991 patients were screened. The majority (88%) of these patients with a history of self-described or physician-diagnosed "sinus" headache were diagnosed at the screening visit as fulfilling IHS migraine criteria (80% of patients) or migrainous criteria (8% of patients). The most common symptoms referable to the sinus area reported by patients at screening were sinus pressure (84%), sinus pain (82%), and nasal congestion (63%).

CONCLUSIONS

In this study, 88% of patients with a history of "sinus" headache were determined to have migraine-type headache. In patients with recurrent headaches without fever or purulent discharge, the presence of sinus-area symptoms may be part of the migraine process. Migraine should be included in the differential diagnosis of these patients.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Headache Care Center, Springfield, MO, USA.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

15364670

Citation

Schreiber, Curtis P., et al. "Prevalence of Migraine in Patients With a History of Self-reported or Physician-diagnosed "sinus" Headache." Archives of Internal Medicine, vol. 164, no. 16, 2004, pp. 1769-72.
Schreiber CP, Hutchinson S, Webster CJ, et al. Prevalence of migraine in patients with a history of self-reported or physician-diagnosed "sinus" headache. Arch Intern Med. 2004;164(16):1769-72.
Schreiber, C. P., Hutchinson, S., Webster, C. J., Ames, M., Richardson, M. S., & Powers, C. (2004). Prevalence of migraine in patients with a history of self-reported or physician-diagnosed "sinus" headache. Archives of Internal Medicine, 164(16), 1769-72.
Schreiber CP, et al. Prevalence of Migraine in Patients With a History of Self-reported or Physician-diagnosed "sinus" Headache. Arch Intern Med. 2004 Sep 13;164(16):1769-72. PubMed PMID: 15364670.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Prevalence of migraine in patients with a history of self-reported or physician-diagnosed "sinus" headache. AU - Schreiber,Curtis P, AU - Hutchinson,Susan, AU - Webster,Christopher J, AU - Ames,Michael, AU - Richardson,Mary S, AU - Powers,Connie, PY - 2004/9/15/pubmed PY - 2005/2/16/medline PY - 2004/9/15/entrez SP - 1769 EP - 72 JF - Archives of internal medicine JO - Arch Intern Med VL - 164 IS - 16 N2 - BACKGROUND: Symptoms referable to the sinus area are frequently reported during migraine attacks, but are not recognized in diagnostic criteria. Underrecognition of migraine may be partly attributed to a variable clinical presentation, and migraines with "sinus" symptoms contribute to this problem. This study was conducted to determine the prevalence of migraine-type headache (International Headache Society [IHS]-defined migraine without aura [IHS 1.1], migraine with aura [IHS 1.2], or migrainous disorder [IHS 1.7]) in patients with a history of self-described or physician-diagnosed "sinus" headache. METHODS: During a clinic visit, patients with a history of "sinus" headache, no previous diagnosis of migraine, and no evidence of infection were assigned an IHS headache diagnosis on the basis of headache histories and reported symptoms. RESULTS: A total of 2991 patients were screened. The majority (88%) of these patients with a history of self-described or physician-diagnosed "sinus" headache were diagnosed at the screening visit as fulfilling IHS migraine criteria (80% of patients) or migrainous criteria (8% of patients). The most common symptoms referable to the sinus area reported by patients at screening were sinus pressure (84%), sinus pain (82%), and nasal congestion (63%). CONCLUSIONS: In this study, 88% of patients with a history of "sinus" headache were determined to have migraine-type headache. In patients with recurrent headaches without fever or purulent discharge, the presence of sinus-area symptoms may be part of the migraine process. Migraine should be included in the differential diagnosis of these patients. SN - 0003-9926 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/15364670/Prevalence_of_migraine_in_patients_with_a_history_of_self_reported_or_physician_diagnosed_"sinus"_headache_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -