A preliminary study on the relationship between central auditory processing and childhood primary headaches in the intercritical phase.

Antonella Ciriaco, Angelo Russo, Daniele Monzani, Elisabetta Genovese, Paola Benincasa, Ernesto Caffo, Luigi Pini
Author Information

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Recently, an increasing number of articles have appeared on central auditory processing disorders, but in the literature there is only one study that evaluated the possible correlation between migraine in the critical phase and central auditory processing. The aim of our study was to assess the correlation between auditory processing information and childhood primary headaches in the intercritical phase.
METHODS: This is an observational study. We enrolled 54 patients, 30 with primary headache (migraine and tension headache) and 24 normal controls, matched for sex and age. The mean age at first observation was 9 years 10 months; the duration of observational follow-up was 2 years. Both groups had normal audiological and neurological profiles, normal peripheral hearing acuity and normal cognitive and behavioral skills. We excluded patients who had undergone pharmacological prophylactic treatment for headaches in the 6 months preceding the study and subjects with a frequency of headache lower than one every two months. After enrolment, both groups were analyzed with a computerized test battery for Speech Perception Tests in silence and in noise background to assess speech perception disabilities. In addition, with a test battery of Speech Perception Tests, we compared patients with migraines and tension-type headaches. The non-parametric χ2 test, the Mann-Whitney U-test and the Wilcoxon signed ranks test were used for statistical analysis. P-values <0.05 were considered significant and STATA 10 software was used for statistical analyses.
RESULTS: Our results showed that patients with primary headache (migraine and tension-type headache), had a deficit of auditory processing in noisy background compared to control cases, but we found no significant differences when we compared patients with migraine and tension-type headache.
CONCLUSIONS: This is a work in progress and further studies are needed to assess the relationship between the impairment of auditory processing and primary headache, not only to improve the diagnostic approach to primary headache, but also to improve therapeutic intervention.

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MeSH Term

Audiometry
Auditory Perception
Case-Control Studies
Child
Female
Humans
Male
Migraine Disorders
Speech Perception
Tension-Type Headache

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0headacheauditoryprocessingprimarystudypatientsmigraineheadachesnormaltestcentralphaseassesscomparedtension-typeonecorrelationchildhoodintercriticalobservationalagegroupsbatterySpeechPerceptionTestsbackgroundusedstatisticalsignificantrelationshipimproveBACKGROUND:RecentlyincreasingnumberarticlesappeareddisordersliteratureevaluatedpossiblecriticalaiminformationMETHODS:enrolled5430tension24controlsmatchedsexmeanfirstobservation9 years10 monthsdurationfollow-up2 yearsaudiologicalneurologicalprofilesperipheralhearingacuitycognitivebehavioralskillsexcludedundergonepharmacologicalprophylactictreatment6 monthsprecedingsubjectsfrequencylowereverytwomonthsenrolmentanalyzedcomputerizedsilencenoisespeechperceptiondisabilitiesadditionmigrainesnon-parametricχ2Mann-WhitneyU-testWilcoxonsignedranksanalysisP-values<005consideredSTATA10softwareanalysesRESULTS:resultsshoweddeficitnoisycontrolcasesfounddifferencesCONCLUSIONS:workprogressstudiesneededimpairmentdiagnosticapproachalsotherapeuticinterventionpreliminary

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