32nd World Seminar on Neurology and Spine Disorders
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Accepted Abstracts

The Comorbidity of Headaches in Pediatric Epilepsy Patients: How Common and What Types?

Hanin Al-Gethami*, Muhammad Talal Alrifai, Ahmed Al-Rumayyan, Waleed Al-Tuwaijri and Duaa Ba-armah
King Salman Hospital, Saudi Arabia.

Citation: Al-Gethami H (2022) The Comorbidity of Headaches in Pediatric Epilepsy Patients: How Common and What Types?. SciTech Central Neurology 2022.

Received: May 25, 2022         Accepted: May 30, 2022         Published: May 30, 2022

Abstract

Objectives: To estimate the prevalence and characteristics of headache in pediatric epileptic patients.
Methods: This cross-sectional study was performed over 6 months period from January 2018 to June 2018 at King Abdullah Specialist Children Hospital, King Abdulaziz Medical City, Riyadh, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia using a structured questionnaire in pediatric patients with epilepsy.
Results: There were 142 patients enrolled (males, 57.7%; average age, 10.7±3.1 years) with idiopathic epilepsy (n=115, 81%) or symptomatic epilepsy (n=27, 19%). Additionally, patients had focal epilepsy (n=102, 72%) or generalized epilepsy (n=40, 28%) and among them, 11 had absence epilepsy. Overall, 65 (45.7%) patients had headaches compared with 3/153 (2%) in the control group (p<0.0001). Among the 65 patients with headaches, 29 (44.6%) had migraine type, 12 (18.4%) had tension-type, and 24 (36.9%) had unclassified headache. There was no significant difference in age, gender, type of epilepsy syndrome, and antiepileptic used except in patients with or without headache. For migraine patients, there was a lower headache prevalence in the subgroup treated with valproic acid compared with other treatments.
Conclusion: Headache, predominantly migraine, is a common problem in pediatric epileptic patients and choosing valproic acid when possible can be important in preventing migraine in these patients.