Abstract

IntroductionMigraine is the most common primary headache in medical care, being the cause of migraine in more than 10% of the population, directly impacting the quality of life and working capacity of those affected. Recently, studies have indicated a close association between migraine and anxious and depressive disorders mediated by mechanisms such as alterations in monoamines (serotonin and dopamine) and neurotransmitter peptides such as endorphins and enkephalins, immune dysfunction, and genetic factors, causing symptoms and common characteristics among patients. ObjectiveInvestigate the association between anxiety and depression with migraine features and accompanying symptoms. MethodsCross-sectional study based on 466 patients with migraine, which were submitted to a structured interview in which demographic, clinical, anthropometric data and data related to migraine and its characteristics were obtained. Besides that, patients answered validated forms regarding the impact of migraine (HIT-6), allodynia (ASC-12), depression (IDB – inventário de Beck), anxiety (STAI Y-1 and Y-2) and hyperacusis scale. Categorical variables were evaluated using the chi-square test and numerical variables were analyzed using the Mann Whitney test. Statistical difference was considered when p≤0.05. Results466 patients participated in the study, of which 86.1% were women, the median age was 33 years, 55.5% of the individuals had episodic migraine and 61.8% reported absence of aura. Regarding the patients with anxiety, 93.30% reported association of osmophobia with migraine attack (p=0.03) and 46.70%, association with diarrhea (p=0.001). Patients with anxiety scored higher on the impact of migraine questionnaire (p=0.046), allodynia (p=0.005) and the hyperacusis scale (p=0.029). (To see the complete abstract, please, check out the PDF).

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