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Researchers Find that Headaches May Be Learned

By kHong, published Jun 10, 2007
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Many teenagers find that at one point or another, "Parents can be a real pain."

While this may be a joke sometimes, a new study has found that teenagers who experience chronic migraine headaches regard their own pains as more serious than those of others. Researchers now believe that the degree of pain at which teens experience it at, is actually variably dependent upon their own parents' responses to their own pain.

According to LiveScience, Ann Pakalnis, neurologist at Columbus Children's Hospital and a professor at Ohio State University College of Medicine, she says the goal of their research is to see "how much of a child's response to migraine pain is learned and how much is hereditary."

Migraines affect about 10 percent of children and adolescents in the United States. Out of that 10 percent, 2 percent have chronic migraines that hit them up to 15 times a month. Symptoms include throbbing head pain, nausea, vomiting, and sensitivity to light. The degrees of migraines range from light pain to extreme pain which can put people out for days.

Pakalnis and her team of researchers surveyed 20 teens from 12 to 17 years old that had chronic migraines, as well as their parents. In their study, they discovered that more than 90 percent of parents in the study reported at least one chronic-pain condition. Conditions range from migraines, to fibromyalgia which is widespread pain in a person's muscles and tissues.

At a meeting of the American Headache Society in Chicago, Paklnis and her team of researchers revealed that "Parents who reported greater disabilities due to chronic pain also had children that rated their migraines as more disabling than teens with no-chronic pain parents."

Researchers Find that Headaches May Be Learned
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Excellent article! You know how to dish out some good ones.

Posted on 06/10/2007 at 3:06:00 PM

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