秘鲁成年人头痛的患病率和与人口统计学的关系:一项基于人口的全国横断面研究

Guiovanna Quispe, Cesar Loza, Luis Limaco, Ruth Gallegos, Carlos Palomino, Ivett Cruz, Jacqueline Miranda, Liliana Rodriguez, Andreas Husøy, Timothy J Steiner
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引用次数: 0

摘要

全球防治头痛运动正在开展一系列以人口为基础的研究,以填补在头痛患病率和可归因负担方面的巨大地理空白。南美洲是迄今为止尚未包括在内的一个主要地区。秘鲁位于南美洲西海岸,安第斯山脉高耸入云,拥有 3240 万居民。这项研究是按照全球运动所使用的标准化方法进行的。这是一项横断面调查,在五个地区采用分组随机抽样的方法,以获得具有全国代表性的样本,并对住户进行突击访问,使用翻译成南美西班牙语的 "头痛导致的限制、残疾、社会障碍和参与障碍(HARDSHIP)"问卷,对每个住户随机抽取的一名成年成员(18-65 岁)进行访谈。中性筛查问题("您在过去一年中是否有头痛症状?")之后是基于 ICHD-3 的诊断问题和人口统计学调查。这项研究包括来自 2385 个符合条件的家庭的 2,149 名参与者(参与比例为 90.1%):其中男性 1,065 人,女性 1,084 人,平均年龄为 42.0 ± 13.7 岁。观察到的所有头痛的 1 年患病率为 64.6% [95% CI:62.5-66.6],经年龄、性别和居住地调整后,偏头痛(明确 + 可能)的患病率为 22.8% [21.0-24.6],紧张性头痛的患病率为 38.9% [36.8-41.0]。紧张型头痛(TTH:也是明确+可能)的患病率为 1.2% [0.8-1.8],可能的药物滥用性头痛(pMOH)的患病率为 2.7% [2.1-3.5],其他头痛(H15+)的患病率为 2.7%[2.1-3.5]。头痛的单日发病率(昨天报告的头痛)为 12.1%。女性偏头痛患病率(28.2%)几乎是男性(16.4%;aOR = 2.1;P 3,500 对 < 350 m)的两倍。全球运动在南美洲进行的首次基于人口的研究发现,头痛疾病在秘鲁很常见,偏头痛和TTH的患病率估计值大大超过了全球估计值。H15 +也很常见,但只有不到三分之一的病例被诊断为pMOH。偏头痛与海拔高度之间的联系得到了证实,并发现在海拔很高的地方这种联系更加明显。这种关联需要进一步研究。
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The prevalence and demographic associations of headache in the adult population of Peru: a national cross-sectional population-based study
The Global Campaign against Headache is conducting a series of population-based studies to fill the large geographical gaps in knowledge of headache prevalence and attributable burden. One major region not until now included is South America. Here we present a study from Peru, a country of 32.4 million inhabitants located at the west coast of South America, notable for its high Andes mountains. The study was conducted in accordance with the standardized methodology used by the Global Campaign. It was a cross-sectional survey using cluster randomised sampling in five regions to derive a nationally representative sample, visiting households unannounced, and interviewing one randomly selected adult member (aged 18–65 years) of each using the Headache-Attributed Restriction, Disability, Social Handicap and Impaired Participation (HARDSHIP) questionnaire translated into South American Spanish. The neutral screening question (“Have you had headache in the last year?”) was followed by diagnostic questions based on ICHD-3 and demographic enquiry. The study included 2,149 participants from 2,385 eligible households (participating proportion 90.1%): 1,065 males and 1,084 females, mean age 42.0 ± 13.7 years. The observed 1-year prevalence of all headache was 64.6% [95% CI: 62.5–66.6], with age-, gender- and habitation-adjusted prevalences of 22.8% [21.0-24.6] for migraine (definite + probable), 38.9% [36.8–41.0] for tension-type headache (TTH: also definite + probable), 1.2% [0.8–1.8] for probable medication-overuse headache (pMOH) and 2.7% [2.1–3.5] for other headache on ≥ 15 days/month (H15+). One-day prevalence of headache (reported headache yesterday) was 12.1%. Migraine was almost twice as prevalent among females (28.2%) as males (16.4%; aOR = 2.1; p < 0.001), and strongly associated with living at very high altitude (aOR = 2.5 for > 3,500 versus < 350 m). The Global Campaign’s first population-based study in South America found headache disorders to be common in Peru, with prevalence estimates for both migraine and TTH substantially exceeding global estimates. H15 + was also common, but with fewer than one third of cases diagnosed as pMOH. The association between migraine and altitude was confirmed, and found to be strengthened at very high altitude. This association demands further study.
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