133 research outputs found
Overview of diagnosis and management of paediatric headache. Part I: diagnosis.
Headache is the most common somatic complaint in children and adolescents. The evaluation should include detailed history of children and adolescents completed by detailed general and neurological examinations. Moreover, the possible role of psychological factors, life events and excessively stressful lifestyle in influencing recurrent headache need to be checked. The choice of laboratory tests rests on the differential diagnosis suggested by the history, the character and temporal pattern of the headache, and the physical and neurological examinations. Subjects who have any signs or symptoms of focal/progressive neurological disturbances should be investigated by neuroimaging techniques. The electroencephalogram and other neurophysiological examinations are of limited value in the routine evaluation of headaches. In a primary headache disorder, headache itself is the illness and headache is not attributed to any other disorder (e.g. migraine, tension-type headache, cluster headache and other trigeminal autonomic cephalgias). In secondary headache disorders, headache is the symptom of identifiable structural, metabolic or other abnormality. Red flags include the first or worst headache ever in the life, recent headache onset, increasing severity or frequency, occipital location, awakening from sleep because of headache, headache occurring exclusively in the morning associated with severe vomiting and headache associated with straining. Thus, the differential diagnosis between primary and secondary headaches rests mainly on clinical criteria. A thorough evaluation of headache in children and adolescents is necessary to make the correct diagnosis and initiate treatment, bearing in mind that children with headache are more likely to experience psychosocial adversity and to grow up with an excess of both headache and other physical and psychiatric symptoms and this creates an important healthcare problem for their future life
Headache in 25 consecutive patients with atrial septal defects before and after percutaneous closure – a prospective case series
In contrast to patent foramen ovale, that is highly prevalent in the general population, atrial
septal defect (ASD) is a rare congenital heart defect. The effect of ASD closure on headache
and migraine remains a matter of controversy. The objectives of the study were (i) to
determine headache prevalence in consecutive patients with ASD scheduled for percutaneous
closure for cardiologic indications, using the classification of the International Headache
Society and (ii) to compare headache characteristics before and after closure of ASD. In this
observational case series no a priori power analysis was performed. Twenty-five consecutive
patients were prospectively included over 27 months. Median duration of follow-up was 12
months, [Interquartile range 0]. Prevalence of active headache seemed to be increased
compared to the general population: Any headaches 88% (95% confidence interval 70-96),
migraine without aura 28% (14-48), migraine with aura 16% (6-35). After ASD closure, we
observed a slightly lower headache frequency (median frequency 1.0 [2.6] vs. 0.3 [1.5]
headaches per month; p=0.067). In patients with ongoing headaches, a significant decrease in
headache intensity (median VAS 7 [3] vs. 5 [4]; p=0.036) was reported. Three patients with
migraine with aura before the intervention reported no migraine with aura attacks at followup,
two of them reported ongoing tension-type headache, one migraine without aura. In
summary, this prospective observational study confirms the high prevalence of headache,
particularly migraine, in ASD patients and suggests a possible small beneficial effect of ASD
closure
Evaluando el progreso de la eficiencia con tecnología en una cadena de hoteles española
This paper analyzes the changes in the total factor productivity index of a Spanish hotel chain in the
period from 2007 to 2010 with the purpose of identifying efficiency patterns for the chain in a period of
financial crisis. The data envelopment analysis (DEA) Malmquist productivity index was used to estimate
productivity change in 38 hotels of the AC chain. Results reveal AC hotels’ efficiency trends and,
therefore, their competitiveness in the recession period; they also show the changes experienced in
these hotels’ total productivity and its components: technological and efficiency changes. Positive
efficiency changes were due to positive technical efficiency rather than technological efficiency. The
recession period certainly influenced the performance of AC Hotels, which focused on organizational
changes rather than investing in technology.Este artigo analisa as mudanças no fator total de produtividade de uma cadeia de hotéis na Espanha,
no período de 2007-2010, com o propósito de identificar os padrões da cadeia em um período
de crise financeira. O índice data envelopment analysis (DEA) Malmquist de produtividade foi usado
para estimar a mudança da produtividade nos 38 hotéis da AC Cadeia de Hotéis. Os resultados revelaram
as tendências de eficiência e competitividade da AC Hotéis em um período de recessão, bem
como as mudanças vivenciadas na produtividade total e, consequentemente, em seus componentes
de eficiência e tecnológicos. O período de recessão influenciou, sem dúvida, o comportamento da AC
Hotéis, que buscou mais mudanças organizacionais do que tecnológicas.Este artículo analiza los cambios del índice de productividad del factor total de una cadena de hoteles
españoles en el periodo de 2007 hasta 2010, con el propósito de identificar patrones de eficiencia
para la cadena en un periodo de crisis financiera. El índice de productividad data envelopment analysis
(DEA) Malmquist fue utilizado para estimar el cambio de productividad en 38 hoteles de la cadena
AC. Los resultados revelan las tendencias de la eficiencia de los hoteles AC y, por lo tanto, su competitividad
en el periodo de recisión; ellos también demuestran los cambios experimentados en la
productividad total de eses hoteles y sus componentes: cambios de eficiencia y tecnológicos. Cambios
de eficiencia positivos se debieron más bien a eficiencias técnicas positivas que a eficiencias tecnológicas.
El periodo de recesión ciertamente ha influenciado los Hoteles AC, que enfocaron más en los
cambios organizacionales que en invirtiendo en tecnología
The prevalence of triggers in paediatric migraine: a questionnaire study in 102 children and adolescents
The prevalence and characterization of migraine triggers have not been rigorously studied in children and adolescents. Using a questionnaire, we retrospectively studied the prevalence of 15 predefined trigger factors in a clinic-based population. In 102 children and adolescents fulfilling the Second Edition of The International Headache Classification criteria for paediatric migraine, at least one migraine trigger was reported by the patient and/or was the parents’ interpretation in 100% of patients. The mean number of migraine triggers reported per subject was 7. Mean time elapsed between exposure to a trigger factor and attack onset was comprised between 0 and 3 h in 88 patients (86%). The most common individual trigger was stress (75.5% of patients), followed by lack of sleep (69.6%), warm climate (68.6%) and video games (64.7%). Stress was also the most frequently reported migraine trigger always associated with attacks (24.5%). In conclusion, trigger factors were frequently reported by children and adolescents with migraine and stress was the most frequent
Overview of diagnosis and management of paediatric headache. Part I: diagnosis
Headache is the most common somatic complaint in children and adolescents. The evaluation should include detailed history of children and adolescents completed by detailed general and neurological examinations. Moreover, the possible role of psychological factors, life events and excessively stressful lifestyle in influencing recurrent headache need to be checked. The choice of laboratory tests rests on the differential diagnosis suggested by the history, the character and temporal pattern of the headache, and the physical and neurological examinations. Subjects who have any signs or symptoms of focal/progressive neurological disturbances should be investigated by neuroimaging techniques. The electroencephalogram and other neurophysiological examinations are of limited value in the routine evaluation of headaches. In a primary headache disorder, headache itself is the illness and headache is not attributed to any other disorder (e.g. migraine, tension-type headache, cluster headache and other trigeminal autonomic cephalgias). In secondary headache disorders, headache is the symptom of identifiable structural, metabolic or other abnormality. Red flags include the first or worst headache ever in the life, recent headache onset, increasing severity or frequency, occipital location, awakening from sleep because of headache, headache occurring exclusively in the morning associated with severe vomiting and headache associated with straining. Thus, the differential diagnosis between primary and secondary headaches rests mainly on clinical criteria. A thorough evaluation of headache in children and adolescents is necessary to make the correct diagnosis and initiate treatment, bearing in mind that children with headache are more likely to experience psychosocial adversity and to grow up with an excess of both headache and other physical and psychiatric symptoms and this creates an important healthcare problem for their future life
Italian guidelines for primary headaches: 2012 revised version
The first edition of the Italian diagnostic and therapeutic guidelines for primary headaches in adults was published in J Headache Pain 2(Suppl. 1):105–190 (2001). Ten years later, the guideline committee of the Italian Society for the Study of Headaches (SISC) decided it was time to update therapeutic guidelines. A literature search was carried out on Medline database, and all articles on primary headache treatments in English, German, French and Italian published from February 2001 to December 2011 were taken into account. Only randomized controlled trials (RCT) and meta-analyses were analysed for each drug. If RCT were lacking, open studies and case series were also examined. According to the previous edition, four levels of recommendation were defined on the basis of levels of evidence, scientific strength of evidence and clinical effectiveness. Recommendations for symptomatic and prophylactic treatment of migraine and cluster headache were therefore revised with respect to previous 2001 guidelines and a section was dedicated to non-pharmacological treatment. This article reports a summary of the revised version published in extenso in an Italian version
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