Headache
| Epidemiology
Headache
Epidemiology

The Association Between Adverse Childhood Experiences and Primary Headache Disorders: A Prognostic Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

book_2 Source: AHSAM 2020 - Poster session Published on September 3, 2020
calendar_today Published on Medfyle: August 2020
headphones 2 min

This Medfyle was published more than two years ago. More recent Medfyle on this topic may now be available.

Key messages

  • This systematic review and meta-analysis explored the relationship between adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and primary headache
  • ACEs are strongly associated with primary headache disorders, with evidence of a dose-response relationship, and should be considered an important risk factor for primary headache disorders.
  • While ACEs categorized as “threat” versus “deprivation” are both strongly associated with primary headache, these findings provide epidemiological support for such a biological framework as these two dimensions may differentially impact neurodevelopment, with potential for a downstream impact on neurological conditions.
Presenting Author
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Claudia Sikorski, PhD (c)
Research Fellow
McMaster University, Ontario, Canada

Claudia Sikorski is currently completing her PhD in Health Research Methodology at McMaster University. Her doctoral research focuses on examining the relationship between coffee and tea and cardiovascular disease and mortality, with consideration of novel biomarkers and genetic variants that might mediate this relationship. She received a CIHR Canada Graduate Master’s Scholarship in 2019. In addition to her doctoral research, she is part of an independent research team investigating the relationships between adverse childhood experiences and negative health outcomes in adulthood, such as headache and chronic pain.

Author disclosures
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Claudia Sikorski, PhD (c): I do not have any relevant financial / non-financial relationships with any proprietary interests.


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