- In Kids with Crohn’s Disease, TNF Inhibitors Help Prevent Serious Complications, Data Suggests
- Has RSV Vaccine Hesitancy Subsided?
- Study: Blood Transfusion Post-Heart Attack May Be Critical for Those with Anemia
- FDA Approves Generic GLP-1 Medicine For Diabetes Treatment
- Quick Fix? New Migraine Medicine May Start Working Right Away
- Food Recall Update: Class 1 Alert Issued for Costco Eggs Linked to Salmonella
- Northwest Naturals Pet Food Linked to Bird Flu in Cat, Issues Recall
- Women Are Less Likely Than Men to Take Medication After a Stroke, Study Suggests
- Could AI Plus Lasers Help Catch Very Early Breast Cancers?
- Fairy Tales Help Teach Healthy Sleep Habits
Childhood Trauma Tied to Migraine Risk as Adult
Experiencing a traumatic event during childhood may raise the risk for migraines as an adult, new Canadian research suggests.
“We found the more types of violence the individual had been exposed to during their childhood, the greater the odds of migraine,” study author Sarah Brennenstuhl, from the University of Toronto, said in a university news release.
“For those who reported all three types of adversities — [witnessing] parental domestic violence, childhood physical and sexual abuse — the odds of migraine were a little over three times higher for men and just under three times higher for women,” Brennenstuhl said.
The findings were reported online recently in the journal Headache. To reach their conclusions, researchers looked at data from a mental health survey involving nearly 23,000 men and women over the age of 18.
“The most surprising finding was the link between exposure to parental domestic violence and migraines,” study co-author Esme Fuller-Thomson, a professor and chair at University of Toronto’s Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, said in the news release.
Girls who had witnessed parental domestic violence grew up to be women with a 64 percent greater risk for migraine, compared with those with no such history. For men, the bump in risk amounted to 52 percent, the investigators found.
And the team noted this association held up even after taking into account a wide range of influential factors, such as age, race, a history of depression or anxiety, and any history of childhood physical and/or sexual abuse.
However, the study did not prove a cause-and-effect link between childhood trauma and migraine risk.
More information
Visit the U.S. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke for more on migraines.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2024 HealthDay. All rights reserved.