8
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
1 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: found
      Is Open Access

      Can personality traits, obesity, depression, anxiety, and quality of life explain the association between migraine and disordered eating attitudes? Translated title: Traços de personalidade, obesidade, depressão, ansiedade e qualidade de vida podem explicar a associação entre migrânea e hábitos alimentares inadequados?

      research-article

      Read this article at

      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Abstract

          ABSTRACT Background: Few studies have explored the coexistence of migraine and disordered eating attitudes. Furthermore, the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms of migraine and disordered eating attitude comorbidity are not clearly understood. Objective: This study aimed to investigate the association between migraine and disordered eating attitudes in relation to personality traits, obesity, quality of life, migraine severity, depression, and anxiety. Methods: This study included 91 patients with episodic migraine and 84 healthy control subjects. Self-report questionnaires were used to evaluate anxiety, depression, migraine-related disability, personality traits, quality of life, and eating disorders. Results: The Eating Attitude Test (EAT) showed disordered eating attitudes in 21 patients (23.1%) in the migraine group and eight patients (9.5%) in the control group. Migraine-related disability, anxiety, depression, neuroticism, and quality of life scores were significantly worse in migraine patients with disordered eating attitudes compared to migraine patients without disordered eating attitudes. In migraine patients, eating attitude test scores were positively correlated with migraine-related disability, anxiety, depression, and neuroticism scores, and negatively correlated with quality of life scores. Conclusion: The association of migraine and disordered eating attitudes was shown to be related to depression, anxiety, quality of life and personality traits and may also indicate a more clinically severe migraine. To the best of our knowledge, there is no literature study that deals with all these relevant data together. However, neuropsychiatry-based biological studies are required to better understand this multifaceted association.

          Translated abstract

          RESUMO Introdução: Poucos estudos exploraram a coexistência de migrânea e hábitos alimentares inadequados. Além disso, os mecanismos fisiopatológicos subjacentes da migrânea e da comorbidade da atitude alimentar inadequada não são claramente entendidos. Objetivo: Este estudo teve como objetivo investigar a associação entre migrânea e atitudes alimentares inadequadas em relação aos traços de personalidade, obesidade, qualidade de vida, gravidade da migrânea, depressão e ansiedade. Métodos: Este estudo incluiu 91 pacientes com migrânea episódica e 84 indivíduos saudáveis. Questionários de autorrelato foram utilizados para avaliar ansiedade, depressão, incapacidade relacionada à enxaqueca, traços de personalidade, qualidade de vida e distúrbios alimentares. Resultados: O Teste de Hábito Alimentar (THA) mostrou hábitos alimentares inadequados em 21 pacientes (23,1%) no grupo com migrânea e 8 pacientes (9,5%) no grupo controle. Os índices de incapacidade, ansiedade, depressão, neuroticismo e qualidade de vida relacionados à migrânea foram significativamente piores em pacientes com migrânea com hábitos alimentares inadequados em comparação com pacientes com migrânea sem hábitos alimentares inadequados. Em pacientes com migrânea, os escores dos testes de hábito alimentar foram correlacionados positivamente com os escores de incapacidade, ansiedade, depressão e neuroticismo relacionados à migrânea e negativamente com os escores de qualidade de vida. Conclusão: A associação de migrânea e atitudes alimentares inadequadas mostrou-se relacionada à depressão, ansiedade, qualidade de vida e traços de personalidade, podendo também indicar uma migrânea mais clinicamente grave. Até onde sabemos, não há estudo de literatura que lide com todos esses dados relevantes juntos. No entanto, são necessários estudos biológicos baseados em neuropsiquiatria para entender melhor essa associação multifacetada.

          Related collections

          Most cited references34

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: found
          • Article: not found

          A six-item short-form survey for measuring headache impact: the HIT-6.

          Migraine and other severe headaches can cause suffering and reduce functioning and productivity. Patients are the best source of information about such impact. To develop a new short form (HIT-6) for assessing the impact of headaches that has broad content coverage but is brief as well as reliable and valid enough to use in screening and monitoring patients in clinical research and practice. HIT-6 items were selected from an existing item pool of 54 items and from 35 items suggested by clinicians. Items were selected and modified based on content validity, item response theory (IRT) information functions, item internal consistency, distributions of scores, clinical validity, and linguistic analyses. The HIT-6 was evaluated in an Internet-based survey of headache sufferers (n = 1103) who were members of America Online (AOL). After 14 days, 540 participated in a follow-up survey. HIT-6 covers six content categories represented in widely used surveys of headache impact. Internal consistency, alternate forms, and test-retest reliability estimates of HIT-6 were 0.89, 0.90, and 0.80, respectively. Individual patient score confidence intervals (95%) of app. +/-5 were observed for 88% of all respondents. In tests of validity in discriminating across diagnostic and headache severity groups, relative validity (RV) coefficients of 0.82 and 1.00 were observed for HIT-6, in comparison with the Total Score. Patient-level classifications based in HIT-6 were accurate 88.7% of the time at the recommended cut-off score for a probability of migraine diagnosis. HIT-6 was responsive to self-reported changes in headache impact. The IRT model estimated for a 'pool' of items from widely used measures of headache impact was useful in constructing an efficient, reliable, and valid 'static' short form (HIT-6) for use in screening and monitoring patient outcomes.
            Bookmark
            • Record: found
            • Abstract: found
            • Article: not found

            The Eating Attitudes Test: an index of the symptoms of anorexia nervosa

            Psychological Medicine, 9(2), 273-279 Data on the development of a 40-item measure of the symptoms in anorexia nervosa are reported. The scale (EAT) is presented in a 6-point, forced choice, self-report format which is easily administered and scored. The EAT was validated using 2 groups of female anorexia nervosa patients ( = 32 and 33) and female control subjects ( = 34 and 59). Total EAT score was significantly correlated with criterion group membership( = 0·87, < 0·001), suggesting a high level of concurrent validity. There was very little overlap in the frequency distributions of the 2 groups and only 7% of the normal controls scored as high as the lowest anorexic patient. Female obese and male subjects also scored significantly lower on the EAT than anorexics. Recovered anorexic patients scored in the normal range on the test, suggesting that the EAT is sensitive to clinical remission.
              Bookmark
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: not found
              • Article: not found

              Development and testing of the Migraine Disability Assessment (MIDAS) Questionnaire to assess headache-related disability

                Bookmark

                Author and article information

                Journal
                anp
                Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria
                Arq. Neuro-Psiquiatr.
                Academia Brasileira de Neurologia - ABNEURO (São Paulo, SP, Brazil )
                0004-282X
                1678-4227
                September 2020
                : 78
                : 9
                : 541-548
                Affiliations
                [2] Yozgat orgnameBozok University orgdiv1Department of Psychiatry Turkey
                [1] Yozgat orgnameBozok University orgdiv1Department of Neurology Turkey
                Article
                S0004-282X2020000900541 S0004-282X(20)07800900541
                10.1590/0004-282x20200046
                64ac0c3d-8586-461b-9e97-fcd2d1a30710

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 06 April 2020
                : 21 February 2020
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 40, Pages: 8
                Product

                SciELO Brazil

                Categories
                Article

                Índice de Massa Corporal,Headache,Comorbidade,Dor,Neuroticism,Neuroticismo,Body Mass Index,Cefaleia,Pain,Comorbidity

                Comments

                Comment on this article