Abstract

Headache in ischemic stroke survivors after the acute stage is incompletely described. We aimed to prospectively describe the characteristics of headache and the predictors of headache at the chronic stage after ischemic stroke. We conducted a prospective observational cohort study including 102 acute ischemic stroke patients admitted to a Stroke Unit. Patients were interviewed at the acute and the chronic stage (12months after stroke). Characteristics of those headaches were collected using a previously validated headache questionnaire enabling headache classification following the International Headache Society criteria. Pre-stroke headache history was registered using the same instrument. Forty-five patients out of 89 with completed follow-up (51%) reported headache at the chronic stage. In most of the patients, headache was sporadic, mild, pressure-like, with a duration of minutes to hours, with characteristics of tension-type headache in 51% (n=23/45). Headache was a reactivation of pre-stroke headache in 33% (n=15/45), different from pre-stroke headache in 44% (n=20/45), and of new-onset in 22% (n=10/45). Only 1 patient had a new-onset headache at the acute stage that persisted with the same characteristics at the chronic stage. Pre-stroke headache (OR=5.3; 95% CI [2.01-13.98] P=.001) and female sex (OR=3.5; 95% CI [1.3-9.4] P=.013) predicted headache at the chronic stage after stroke, controlling for age, severity, and location of stroke. Headache in ischemic stroke survivors at the chronic stage is more frequent in women and in patients with pre-stroke headache. It is most frequently a headache with different characteristics of the pre-stroke headache and only rarely a new-onset headache starting at the acute stage and persisting at the chronic stage.

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