Research Abstract
Background
Headaches were overlooked in treatment during the coronavirus "COVID-19" pandemic. This study aimed to assess the impact of COVID-19 on patients with tension headache (TH) and identify predictors of headache worsening.
Methods
This cross-sectional study compared TH patients (PwTH) (n=157) to controls without TH (PwoTH) (n=151) during the pandemic. Sociodemographic, clinical, COVID-19-related, depression, and anxiety data were contrasted between groups pre-pandemic and during-pandemic. PwTH was categorized into worsening (WPwTH) and non-worsening (NWPwTH) groups to identify worsening predictors.
Results
66.2% of PwTH were females versus 49.7% of PwoTH (p=0.004). Both groups exhibited significantly increased depression and anxiety levels during versus pre-pandemic, with no intergroup differences. Of 157 PwTH, 125 (79.6%) had WPwTH versus 32 (20.4%) had NWPwTH during pandemic. WPWTH had significantly increased headache frequency versus NWPwTH during the pandemic (P=0.001). Both subgroups had increased anxiety and depression, but WPWTH had significantly higher increase in anxiety (P=0.03). Regression analysis revealed that family COVID-19 exposure, healthcare visits, and increased anxiety significantly predicted TTH worsening.
Conclusions
This study revealed that a substantial percentage of TTH patients worsened during the COVID-19 pandemic. Family COVID-19 exposure, healthcare visits, and increased anxiety predicted worsening TTH. Managing these factors during stress may avoid TTH worsening.
Research Date
Research Department
Research Journal
Aswan University Medical Journal
Research Member
Research Pages
125-136
Research Publisher
Aswan University, Faculty of Medicine
Research Vol
Volume 4
Research Website
https://aumj.journals.ekb.eg/article_345371.html
Research Year
2024
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