Litcius/Paper detail

Headaches and obesity

Ida Fortini, Bernardo Dror Felsenfeld

2022Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Obesity and headache disorders are two very common conditions in the general population that have been increasing in incidence over the last decades. Recent studies have shown a significant relationship between obesity and headaches, particularly migraine, with an important role in whether the disease is chronic. On the other hand, no such association was found with tension-type headaches. Studies showing an overlapping of hunger-control pathways and those involved in the pathophysiology of migraine may justify the close association between obesity and migraine. Moreover, a secondary headache for which obesity is a strong risk factor is idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension (pseudotumor cerebri), with several studies showing the impact of weight reduction/bariatric surgery in the treatment of the disease. In conclusion, since obesity is a modifiable risk factor, it is important for physicians treating patients with headaches, and particularly migraine, to be aware of the association between these two disorders.

Topics & Concepts

HeadachesMedicineMigraineObesityRisk factorDiseaseIncidence (geometry)PediatricsPopulationInternational Classification of Headache DisordersInternal medicineSurgeryEnvironmental healthOpticsPhysicsMigraine and Headache StudiesSympathectomy and Hyperhidrosis TreatmentsNeuroscience of respiration and sleep