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Journal of Child Neurology
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Medication-Overuse Headache in Children: Is Initial Preventive Therapy Necessary?

Eric H. Kossoff, MD

Departments of Neurology and Pediatrics, The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, ekossoff{at}jhmi.edu

Dhwani N. Mankad, MPH

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD

Chronic daily headaches can be a difficult problem in children as well as adults. Over half of the cases of chronic daily headaches in adults are thought to be due to medication-overuse headache, and treatment consists of discontinuation of these analgesics. Since many patients are also treated with preventive agents at the time of analgesic withdrawal, it is difficult to determine whether discontinuation alone is the most effective treatment. A retrospective study was performed to evaluate the outcomes of 43 children (ages 6—17 years) with medication-overuse headache 1 month after withdrawal of analgesics: 20 children received daily doses of a preventive medication, and 23 received no preventive medication. Headache reduction was assessed 1 month later. There was no difference in the percentage, with 90% or greater headache reduction at 1 month between children treated by withdrawal of analgesic drugs only and those receiving preventive medications (57% vs 50%, respectively). There was no influence of age, gender, use of triptans as rescue agents, or caffeine use on outcomes. A previous duration of headaches over 2 years was negatively correlated with overall outcome. We advise discontinuation of analgesics in all children with medication-overuse headache, without the necessity for starting daily preventive agents concurrently. Should headaches persist after 1 month, such agents can be added. (J Child Neurol 2006;21:45—48).

Journal of Child Neurology, Vol. 21, No. 1, 45-48 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/08830738060210011401


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