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      Headache Characteristics and Their Influencing Factors Among Pregnant Women in Saudi Arabia: A Survey Study

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          Abstract

          Background

          Headache disorders, particularly migraines, significantly impact public health globally. The Global Burden of Disease (GBD) report highlights migraines as the second leading cause of disability worldwide, especially among women under 50. Hormonal changes, particularly estrogen, play a role in primary headaches like migraines, and this connection becomes important during pregnancy due to physiological changes. 

          Materials and methods

          A cross-sectional survey was conducted among pregnant women in Saudi Arabia to assess the characteristics of the headaches and explore their influencing factors. The study initiated the data collection process across various regions of Saudi Arabia from February 2023 to July 2023. Participants included pregnant women aged 18 or above residing in Saudi Arabia. Data were collected through an online self-administered survey with multiple-choice questions. Descriptive analysis and Pearson Chi-Square tests were performed using IBM SPSS Statistics version 25 (IBM Corp., Armonk, USA).

          Results

          A study surveyed 411 pregnant women to investigate the characteristics of headaches during pregnancy. The majority of participants were Saudi nationals 381 (92.7%) and 242 (58.9%) aged 18-30 and 357 (86.9%) resided in urban areas. Around 72 (17.5%) reported having chronic diseases. Results showed that 246 (59.9%) of pregnant women were diagnosed with headaches before pregnancy, with migraines being the most common type by 145 (35.3%). Headache frequency increased during pregnancy for 171 (41.6%) of participants, and the majority 275 (66.9%) experienced headaches lasting 0-3 hours. Nausea 219 (53.3%) and holo-cranial pain 112 (27.3%) were common accompanying symptoms.

          Conclusion

          This study provides valuable insights into the burden of headaches among pregnant women in Saudi Arabia, emphasizing the importance of improved healthcare practices and educational initiatives to effectively address this issue.

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          Most cited references34

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          Global, regional, and national burden of migraine and tension-type headache, 1990–2016: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2016

          Summary Background Through the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors (GBD) studies, headache has emerged as a major global public health concern. We aimed to use data from the GBD 2016 study to provide new estimates for prevalence and years of life lived with disability (YLDs) for migraine and tension-type headache and to present the methods and results in an accessible way for clinicians and researchers of headache disorders. Methods Data were derived from population-based cross-sectional surveys on migraine and tension-type headache. Prevalence for each sex and 5-year age group interval (ie, age 5 years to ≥95 years) at different time points from 1990 and 2016 in all countries and GBD regions were estimated using a Bayesian meta-regression model. Disease burden measured in YLDs was calculated from prevalence and average time spent with headache multiplied by disability weights (a measure of the relative severity of the disabling consequence of a disease). The burden stemming from medication overuse headache, which was included in earlier iterations of GBD as a separate cause, was subsumed as a sequela of either migraine or tension-type headache. Because no deaths were assigned to headaches as the underlying cause, YLDs equate to disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs). We also analysed results on the basis of the Socio-demographic Index (SDI), a compound measure of income per capita, education, and fertility. Findings Almost three billion individuals were estimated to have a migraine or tension-type headache in 2016: 1·89 billion (95% uncertainty interval [UI] 1·71–2·10) with tension-type headache and 1·04 billion (95% UI 1·00–1·09) with migraine. However, because migraine had a much higher disability weight than tension-type headache, migraine caused 45·1 million (95% UI 29·0–62·8) and tension-type headache only 7·2 million (95% UI 4·6–10·5) YLDs globally in 2016. The headaches were most burdensome in women between ages 15 and 49 years, with migraine causing 20·3 million (95% UI 12·9–28·5) and tension-type headache 2·9 million (95% UI 1·8–4·2) YLDs in 2016, which was 11·2% of all YLDs in this age group and sex. Age-standardised DALYs for each headache type showed a small increase as SDI increased. Interpretation Although current estimates are based on limited data, our study shows that headache disorders, and migraine in particular, are important causes of disability worldwide, and deserve greater attention in health policy debates and research resource allocation. Future iterations of this study, based on sources from additional countries and with less methodological heterogeneity, should help to provide stronger evidence of the need for action. Funding Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
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            Migraine remains second among the world’s causes of disability, and first among young women: findings from GBD2019

            The capstone papers on the Global Burden of Disease study 2019 (GBD2019), delayed by a diversion of resources to mapping covid-19, appeared in Lancet on October 17th. The accompanying announcement by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) described GBD2019 as “the largest and most comprehensive effort to quantify health loss across places and over time”, including “more than 3.5 billion estimates of … 369 diseases and injuries … in 204 countries and territories” [1]. IHME had previously announced its move to a 3-year cycle of major model updates for most non-fatal causes and risk factors (but not causes of death) [2]. Each future GBD round will include a subset of these “in rotation”, while still producing results each year for all causes of death and all non-fatal outcomes. The focus among the capstone papers was therefore on disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) [3], without the usual separately reported estimates of years lived with disability (YLDs). From a policy perspective (GBD’s main purpose is to inform health policy), this makes complete sense: years of healthy life lost to early mortality are clearly no less important than those lost to disability. But the approach takes away the spotlight from disabling diseases that do not cause early death – such as headache disorders. Nevertheless, headache disorders in 2019 ranked 14th among global causes of DALYs (all ages, both genders) [3]. Seven non-communicable disorders were ranked higher: ischaemic heart disease, stroke, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes, low back pain, congenital defects and depressive disorders [3]. Among females, headache disorders were tenth, below gynaecological diseases (ninth) but above depressive disorders (11th). Among young adult females (15–49 years), they were second only to gynaecological diseases (note that this was of DALYs, not YLDs). Among young adult men they were tenth, with road injuries, self-harm, interpersonal violence and cirrhosis – all causes of premature mortality – each responsible for more DALYs. What about YLDs? In separate on-line estimates, headache disorders were the cause in 2019 of 46.6 million YLDs globally, 5.4% of total YLDs, with 88.2% of these attributable to migraine [4]. In terms of lost healthy life, that equates to 46.6 million people dying one year early. In the ranked causes of YLDs (all ages, both genders), headache disorders (602.5 per 100,000 person/years) were third, below low back pain (823.0) and, by a tiny margin, depressive orders (605.7) (Table 1). Among females, gynaecological diseases (second: 764.0) overtook both headache (third: 751.0) and depressive disorders (fourth: 743.7) (Table 1) despite their clearly evident association with female gender. Also clearly evident was the association of headache disorders with age – specifically, with young adulthood. Among females aged 15–49 years, headache disorders (1016.1) were second only to gynaecological diseases (1230.5), with depressive disorders third (890.4). But in all young adults, with gynaecological diseases a factor among only half, headache disorders (813.4) were top cause of YLDs (Table 1). Table 1 GBD2019: Top level-3 causes of global disability (expressed as years lived with disability [YLDs]) by gender and age (data from [3, 4]) Gender Age range (years) Rank Cause % of total YLDs [uncertainty interval] Both All 1 Low back pain 7.4 [6.2–8.7] 2 Depressive disorders 5.5 [4.3–6.8] 3 Headache disorders 5.4 [1.1–10.6] 15–49 1 Headache disorders 8.0 [1.6–15.7] 2 Low back pain 7.6 [6.1–9.3] 3 Depressive disorders 7.3 [5.7–9.2] Male All 1 Low back pain 7.0 [5.8–8.2 2 Age-related hearing loss 5.2 [4.3–6.4] 3 Diabetes 4.9 [4.2–5.7] 4 Depressive disorders 4.7 [3.7–5.9] 5 Headache disorders 4.6 [1.0–9.0] 15–49 1 Low back pain 7.8 [6.3–9.6] 2 Headache disorders 7.0 [1.5–13.8] 3 Depressive disorders 6.6 [5.2–8.3] Female All 1 Low back pain 7.7 [6.5–9.2] 2 Gynaecological diseases 6.2 [5.1–7.3] 3 Headache disorders 6.0 [1.2–12.0] 4 Depressive disorders 6.0 [4.8–7.5] 15–49 1 Gynaecological diseases 10.7 [8.7–12.9] 2 Headache disorders 8.7 [1.6–16.2] 3 Depressive disorder 7.8 [6.0–9.9] There were variations according to World Bank region and country income level. Headache disorders were third cause of YLDs in East Asia & Pacific and in Middle East & North Africa, but second in Europe & Central Asia, fourth in South Asia and in sub-Saharan Africa, fifth in Latin America & Caribbean and (surprisingly) sixth in North America. They were third in countries classed by the World Bank as lower- or upper-middle-income, but fourth in low-income countries and fifth in those classed as high income. The association between headache and socioeconomic status has never been clear! GBD is wholly dependent on data. It applies highly sophisticated modelling to fill data gaps, “borrowing strength between locations and over time” [3]. But extrapolations from nearby countries to those where data are sparse or totally lacking is a process that cannot be free from uncertainty (evidenced by the wide uncertainty intervals around estimates for headache disorders [Table 1]). Not too much should be made of these variations. The level-3 grouping of headache disorders in GBD2019 includes only specific diseases: migraine and tension-type headache (TTH), each with medication-overuse headache (MOH) as a sequela factored in according to the proportion of MOH attributed to it [3]. Low back pain, on the contrary, is a symptom. It ought to, and hopefully will in future iterations of GBD, be split according to its diverse aetiologies. Even at level 4 in IHME’s analyses – supposedly of specific disorders – low back pain remains as a listed single cause of YLDs, and inevitably is ranked first among all but young adult women (Table 2). Migraine remains second overall (both genders, all ages) but takes first place in young women as it did in GBD2016 [5] (Table 2). In fact, migraine is top cause of DALYs in young women (Table 3), a finding, surely, of profound significance. No other disease, communicable or non-communicable, is responsible for more years of lost healthy life in young women, notwithstanding that migraine causes no premature mortality. Table 2 GBD2019: Top level-4 causes of global disability (expressed as years lived with disability [YLDs]) by gender and age (data from [3, 4]) Gender Age range (years) Rank Cause % of total YLDs [uncertainty interval] Both All 1 Low back pain 7.4 [6.2–8.7] 2 Migraine 4.9 [0.8–10.1] 3 Age-related hearing loss 4.7 [3.8–5.7] 15–49 1 Low back pain 7.6 [6.1–9.3] 2 Migraine 7.3 [1.1–15.1 3 Major depression 5.8 [4.3–7.5] Male All 1 Low back pain 7.0 [5.8–8.2 2 Age-related hearing loss 5.2 [4.3–6.4] 3 Diabetes type 2 4.7 [4.0–5.4] 4 Migraine 4.1 [0.7–8.3] 15–49 1 Low back pain 7.8 [6.3–9.6] 2 Migraine 6.3 [1.1–12.8] 3 Major depression 5.2 [3.8–6.7] Female All 1 Low back pain 7.7 [6.5–9.2] 2 Migraine 5.5 [0.9–11.6] 3 Other musculoskeletal 5.0 [3.8–6.4] 15–49 1 Migraine 8.0 [1.2–16.7] 2 Low back pain 7.4 [5.9–9.1] 3 Major depression 6.2 [4.6–8.2] Table 3 GBD2019: Top level-4 causes of global lost healthy life (expressed as disability-adjusted life years [DALYs]) among young adult women (data from [3, 4]) Rank Cause % of total DALYs [uncertainty interval] 1 Migraine 4.9 [0.7–10.6] 2 Low back pain 4.5 [3.4–5.6] 3 Major depression 3.8 [2.7–4.9] New to GBD2019 were bias adjustments to make allowance for low-quality sampling and survey methods, and for a range of other methodological deficiencies in data sources [4]. This is an important development, since epidemiological methods in headache have improved over the last decade [6], and case definitions have changed over the last two [7, 8]. These, too, were factors contributing to the wide uncertainty intervals. Also as a methodological innovation, GBD2019 took separate account of definite and probable migraine and of definite and probable TTH [8], using individual participant data from studies in 19 countries on frequency and duration of episodes to estimate proportions of time in ictal state for each [4]. The authors of the GBD2019 report wrote: “The prominent position of headache disorders in the DALY rankings in the 10-24-year and 25-49-year age groups has received little attention in global health policy debates” [3]. A similar message has been our repeated cri de coeur [5, 9–12]. They added: “While there is no cure for these disorders, there are effective symptomatic and preventive treatments available.” This, of course, is not a revelation in headache circles, but outside them it appears still to be so. Remediability is the crucial issue in claims for priority in health care, especially when there is strong evidence of cost-effectiveness [13]. The disability burden of headache disorders – particularly of migraine, by far the principal contributor [3] – is concentrated among those of productive age. It is this factor that keeps headache high among the causes of YLDs (and DALYs) in less wealthy countries, where shorter life expectancies raise the population proportions of young adults. It is this, also, that adds – or should add – a dimension of mind-focusing concern for policy makers everywhere [5, 14].
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              Sex hormones affect neurotransmitters and shape the adult female brain during hormonal transition periods

              Sex hormones have been implicated in neurite outgrowth, synaptogenesis, dendritic branching, myelination and other important mechanisms of neural plasticity. Here we review the evidence from animal experiments and human studies reporting interactions between sex hormones and the dominant neurotransmitters, such as serotonin, dopamine, GABA and glutamate. We provide an overview of accumulating data during physiological and pathological conditions and discuss currently conceptualized theories on how sex hormones potentially trigger neuroplasticity changes through these four neurochemical systems. Many brain regions have been demonstrated to express high densities for estrogen- and progesterone receptors, such as the amygdala, the hypothalamus, and the hippocampus. As the hippocampus is of particular relevance in the context of mediating structural plasticity in the adult brain, we put particular emphasis on what evidence could be gathered thus far that links differences in behavior, neurochemical patterns and hippocampal structure to a changing hormonal environment. Finally, we discuss how physiologically occurring hormonal transition periods in humans can be used to model how changes in sex hormones influence functional connectivity, neurotransmission and brain structure in vivo.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Cureus
                Cureus
                2168-8184
                Cureus
                Cureus (Palo Alto (CA) )
                2168-8184
                24 November 2023
                November 2023
                : 15
                : 11
                : e49345
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Medicine, College of Medicine, Taif University, Taif, SAU
                [2 ] Medicine, College of Medicine, Jazan University, Jazan, SAU
                [3 ] Medicine and Surgery, Imam Muhammad Ibn Saud Islamic University, Riyadh, SAU
                [4 ] Medicine, College of Medicine, Umm Al-Qura University, Makkah, SAU
                [5 ] Medicine and Surgery, College of Medicine, Prince Sattam bin Abdualaziz University, Riyadh, SAU
                [6 ] Medicine and Surgery, Jazan University, Jazan, SAU
                [7 ] Medicine, Umm Al-Qura University, Makkah, SAU
                Author notes
                Article
                10.7759/cureus.49345
                10748932
                38143645
                52d66298-c350-4f3e-8a2f-1f05f12b8a45
                Copyright © 2023, Alharthi et al.

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License CC-BY 4.0., which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

                History
                : 24 November 2023
                Categories
                Neurology
                Obstetrics/Gynecology

                influencing factors,saudi arabia,prevalence,pregnancy,headache

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