Headache Drugs Logo
Search    
Home | About Dr. Robbins | Archived Articles | Headache Books | Topic Index  


Back to List

Title:


Author:
Date:
Source:

Headache and the Risk of Stroke:
A Prospective Observational Cohort Study
Among 35,056 Finnish Men and Women
Jousilahti P, Toumilehto J, Rastenyte D, Vartiainen E.
Posted: March 2004  
Arch Intern Med. 2003;163:1058-1062


Background:   Previous studies have shown an increased risk of stroke among patients with migraine. However, very few data are available on the possible association between chronic unspecified headache and the risk of stroke.

Methods:   A prospective cohort study included 35,056 randomly selected Finnish men and women aged 25 to 64 years. Self-reported headache, smoking, diabetes, blood pressure, weight, height, serum cholesterol level and oral contraceptive use were recorded at baseline. During the follow-up, 2,167 incident stroke events were ascertained with computer-based record linkage.

Results:   Women reported headache twice as often as men. Among men the headache-associated hazard ratios for stroke were 4.08, 1.86, and 1.24 during a 1, 5, and a maximum of 23 years of follow-up respectively. Adjustment for the other risk factors decreased the hazard ratios only slightly. Among women, there was also a direct but statistically nonsignificant association between headache and the risk of stroke.

Conclusions:   Chronic headache is an independent predictor of stroke among men. Since the association between headache and the risk of stroke was particularly strong during a short follow-up, chronic headache may be a marker of the underlying disease process leading to acute stroke. The sex difference observed in this association may be due to a higher prevalence and a more heterogeneous etiology of headache in women compared with men.