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Quintessence Publishing: Journals: JOP
Journal of Orofacial Pain

Edited by Barry J. Sessle, BDS, MDS, BSc, PhD, FRSC

Official Journal of the American Academy of Orofacial Pain,
and the European, Australian, Asian, and Ibero-Latin Academies of Craniomandibular Disorders

ISSN 1064-6655

Publication:
Summer 2010
Volume 24 , Issue 3

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Migraine is the Most Prevalent Primary Headache in Individuals with Temporomandibular Disorders

Ana L. Franco, DDS, MSc/Daniela A.G. Gonçalves, DDS, MSc, PhD/Sabrina M. Castanharo, DDS/José G. Speciali, MD, MSc, PhD/Marcelo E. Bigal, MD, MSc, PhD/ Cinara M. Camparis. DDS, MSc, PhD

Pages: 287–292
PMID: 20664830

Aims: To assess the prevalence of primary headaches (HA) in adults with temporomandibular disorders (TMD) who were assessed in a specialty orofacial pain clinic, as well as in controls without TMD. Methods: The sample consisted of 158 individuals with TMD seen at a university-based specialty clinic, as well as 68 controls. The Research Diagnostic Criteria for TMD were used to diagnose the TMD patients. HAs were assessed using a structured interview and classified according to the Second Edition of the International Classification for Headache Disorders. Data were analyzed by chi-square tests with a significance level of 5% and odds ratio (OR) tests with a 95% confidence interval (CI). Results: HAs occurred in 45.6% of the control group (30.9% had migraine and 14.7% had tension-type headache [TTH]) and in 85.5% of individuals with TMD. Among individuals with TMD, migraine was the most prevalent primary HA (55.3%), followed by TTH (30.2%); 14.5% had no HA. In contrast to controls, the odds ratio (OR) for HA in those with TMD was 7.05 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 3.65–13.61; P = .000), for migraine, the OR was 2.76 (95% CI = 1.50–5.06; P = .001), and for TTH, the OR was 2.51 (95% CI = 1.18–5.35; P = .014). Myofascial pain/arthralgia was the most common TMD diagnosis (53.2%). The presence of HA or specific HAs was not associated with the time since the onset of TMD (P = .714). However, migraine frequency was positively associated with TMD pain severity (P = .000). Conclusion: TMD was associated with increased primary HA prevalence rates. Migraine was the most common primary HA diagnosis in individuals with TMD. J Orofac Pain 2010;24:287–292

Key words: facial pain, migraine, prevalence, temporomandibular joint, tension-type headache

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