A survey was carried out among 940 employees in a mail administration building in Hamburg, Germany to determine the prevalence rates of headache and of migraine, based on several definitions. Headache symptoms were assessed by means of questionnaires, which were returned by 92% of the addressed persons and properly evaluable in 87.8%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFData on headache symptoms obtained in two samples (N = 422 and 304) by means of questionnaires were subjected to configural frequency analysis (CFA). This not widely-known method tests whether certain symptom combinations appear more often or less often than expected by chance. In both samples symptom combinations corresponding to the syndromes of migraine with aura, migraine without aura and tension headache did indeed occur with significant frequency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychother Psychosom Med Psychol
August 1991
In order to replicate previous findings, two studies were carried out comparing migraine patients and headache free controls in terms of degree of ambition, idea of tidiness, and rigidity. Migraineurs (75 Ss in study I, 82 in study II) were recruited in the frame of two large inquiries on headache frequency; control groups were made up of persons out of the same samples and matched for age, sex, educational level and professional status. Personality variables were assessed by means of a standardized questionnaire.
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