• Sub-concussive impacts may affect learning
  • Limit youth practices says USA Football and Steelers
  • Football helmet grants
  • Study takes closer look at athletes with CTE
  • Ex-teammate: Seau suffered 1,500 concussions; donates brain
  • Former NFL player Coy Wire on concussions: create a new norm
  • CTE and Alzheimer's; different diseases
  • Junior Seau's former agent reflects on his death

Teen girls have more headaches after concussion

A trip to the doctor for a concussion evaluation should include a concussion history; how many, how far apart, how quick was recovery?  Another common question delves into the relationship between migraines and concussion, and a new study published Monday in the journal Pediatrics provides clues as to why.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about 1.7 million people suffer a TBI every year; 75 percent of those are concussions. (Concussions are sometimes referred to as a mild TBI or mTBI).

Researchers studied children aged 5-17, several months after they suffered a traumatic brain injury (TBI) ranging from mild to moderate/severe.

They found that overall, headaches three and twelve months post-injury were related to injury severity, time after injury, age and gender.

Specifically:

-- Children who suffered mild injuries were more likely to report headaches than those with more severe injuries

-- at three months:

  • 43% of those with mild injuries reported headaches;  59% of this reporting group were girls
  • 37% of those with moderate/severe injuries reported headaches
  • 26% of those without an injury (control group) reported headaches

Those at greatest risk of suffering headaches post-injury were adolescent girls.

Researchers note that in general, girls and boys suffer migraines at about the same rate until puberty, when girls' susceptibility increases.

Dr. Michael Collins, director of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center's Sports Medicine Concussion Program said, "Concussions and migraines are evil cousins," according to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.  Girls are four to six times more likely to suffer migraines than boys, he continued, and people who are susceptible to migraines can suffer concussions from traumas too mild to affect others.  Their concussions may also be more severe.

Researchers said, "These findings lend support to the theory that the pathophysiology of post-traumatic headaches after TBI may share similarities with the pathophysiology of migraine."


 

Sources:

Study: Headaches more likely among girls with brain injury  --  Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Dec. 6, 2011

 

Blume, Heidi, Monica Vavilala, Kenneth Jaffe, Thomas Koepsell, Jin Wang, Nancy Temkin, Dennis Durbin, Andrea Dorsch, and Frederick Rivara. "Headache After Traumatic Brain Injury: A Cohort Study." Pediatrics (December 5, 2011). Online ahead of print.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Comments/questions?  Contact Jean Rickerson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

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