精神合并症、恢复力和执行功能对儿童和青少年头痛的影响:一项叙述性回顾。

IF 4.6 2区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Cephalalgia Pub Date : 2025-09-01 Epub Date: 2025-09-12 DOI:10.1177/03331024251364204
Marco Antônio Arruda, Renato Arruda, José Aparecido da Silva
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:通过生物心理社会学的视角,可以更全面地了解儿童和青少年头痛疾病的精神合并症的影响,该视角考察了头痛发作以外因素的动态相互作用。弹性和执行功能在这个框架中出现,在发展精神病理学和其他关键领域发挥着核心作用。方法本综述旨在通过以恢复力和执行功能(EF)的作用为中心的生物心理社会视角,研究精神共病对儿童和青少年偏头痛和/或高频头痛(HFH)的影响,探讨其潜在的临床意义。PubMed检索了人类参与者的英语文章,从出生到18岁,发表到2025年4月10日。结果临床和基于人群的研究表明,患有偏头痛和/或HFH的儿童和青少年发生低恢复力和EF损伤的风险增加。初步的相互作用和多变量分析表明,高易感性(相对于韧性)在偏头痛的精神共病中发挥调节作用,并在HFH与精神症状和障碍的关联中发挥中介作用。青少年偏头痛和/或HFH精神共病的候选预测因素包括EF损伤、易受伤害、女性、低社会经济地位、产前接触烟草、学习成绩差和头痛发作伴恶心和呕吐。结论精神合并症对患有头痛疾病的儿童和青少年的多维影响得到了明确的证明,有一致的证据表明它们对头痛严重程度和慢性化的不利影响,以及对生活质量、认知表现、学习成绩和整体患者幸福感的负面影响,导致儿童、青少年和成年期的长期连续性。这种影响的大部分可能是由于复原力降低、脆弱性增加和EF受损之间的相互作用。这篇叙述性综述强调了常规评估患有头痛疾病的儿童和青少年的精神症状、恢复力、执行功能技能和学校功能的相关性。未来的研究应该检查早期干预是否侧重于恢复力、易损性和EF可以预防精神合并症并改善患有偏头痛和/或HFH的儿童和青少年的头痛结局。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Impact of psychiatric comorbidity, resilience and executive function on childhood and adolescent headaches: A narrative review.

BackgroundThe impact of psychiatric comorbidities in children and adolescents with headache disorders can be more comprehensively understood through a biopsychosocial perspective, which examines the dynamic interplay of factors beyond headache attacks. Resilience and executive function emerge within this framework, playing a central role in development psychopathology and other critical domains.MethodsThis narrative review aimed to examine the impact of psychiatric comorbidity on migraine and/or high-frequency headaches (HFH) in children and adolescents through a biopsychosocial perspective centered on the role of resilience and executive function (EF), exploring their potential clinical implications. PubMed was searched for English language articles of human participants, from birth to 18 years, published up to 10 April 2025.ResultsClinical and population-based studies suggest that children and adolescents with migraine and/or HFH are at an increased risk of low resilience and EF impairments. Preliminary interaction and multivariate analyses suggest that high vulnerability (the counterpart to resilience) exerts a moderating role in the psychiatric comorbidity of migraine, as well as a mediating effect in the association of HFH with psychiatric symptoms and disorders. Candidate predictors of psychiatric comorbidity in youths with migraine and/or HFH include EF impairment, high vulnerability, female sex, low socioeconomic status, prenatal exposure to tobacco, poor academic performance and headache attacks accompanied by nausea and vomiting.ConclusionsThe multidimensional impact of psychiatric comorbidities on children and adolescents with headache disorders is clearly demonstrated by consistent evidence of their adverse effects on headache severity and chronification, as well as negative outcomes in quality of life, cognitive performance, academic achievement and overall patient well-being, leading to long-term continuity across childhood, adolescence and adulthood. Most of this impact is probably due to the interactions between reduced resilience, increased vulnerability and EF impairment. This narrative review underscore the relevance of routinely assessing psychiatric symptoms, resilience, executive function skills and school functioning in children and adolescents with headache disorders. Future studies should examine whether early interventions focused on resilience, vulnerability and EF can prevent psychiatric comorbidities and improve headache outcomes in children and adolescents with migraine and/or HFH.

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来源期刊
Cephalalgia
Cephalalgia 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
10.10
自引率
6.10%
发文量
108
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Cephalalgia contains original peer reviewed papers on all aspects of headache. The journal provides an international forum for original research papers, review articles and short communications. Published monthly on behalf of the International Headache Society, Cephalalgia''s rapid review averages 5 ½ weeks from author submission to first decision.
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