Abstract

Background The aim of the study was to investigate the clinical profile, disease burden, quality of life, and treatment patterns of various headache subtypes. Method In this prospective observational study, 815 patients presenting with chief complaints of headache between January 2020 to September 2021 were registered. After a detailed history, clinical examination, and subtyping, they were assessed at baseline with well-validated scales for severity (Visual Analogue Scale-VAS), disability burden (Migraine Disability Assessment- MIDAS), Humanistic burden (Headache Impact Test-HIT-6), and quality of life (World health organization-quality of life-WHO-QoL-8) scores. After initiating adequate management, parameters were reassessed at 3 and 6 months. Results 549 (67.7%) patients had migraine (395-episodic migraine, 144-chronic migraine), 266 (32.2%) patients had tension-type headache (TTH). Loss of sleep, prolonged working hours, and stress were common triggers. Disease burden, severity, and poor life quality was quite high in migraine patients (76.5% with moderate to severe disability, 61.7% with severe headache at onset, and 72% with poor life quality). All parameters had statistically significant improvement with preventive medication and lifestyle changes. Conclusion In our study, we found migraine was the most common primary headache followed by TTH. Migraine patients had more severity, disease burdens, and inferior quality of life at onset compared to other headaches. With early and proper diagnosis as well as preventive treatment (including lifestyle modifications), all parameters could be reversed positively in a brief time. This is the first study on headache burden and its effect on the quality of life in the north Indian population.

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