Objective: To evaluate relationships between psychiatric symptoms, acceptance, and migraine-related disability in a sample of people with migraine presenting at a tertiary care headache center.
Background: Migraine is a chronic disease that can be severely disabling. Despite a strong theoretical basis and evidence in other pain conditions, little is known about relationships between acceptance, psychiatric symptoms, and migraine-related disability.
Methods: Ninety patients with physician-diagnosed migraine completed surveys assessing demographics, headache symptoms, severe migraine-related disability (Migraine Disability Assessment Scale total score dichotomized at ≥ 21), depression (Patient Health Questionnaire-9) and anxiety symptoms (Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7), and acceptance (Chronic Pain Acceptance Questionnaire; subscales: Pain Willingness and Activity Engagement).
Results: Participants (77.8% white, non-Hispanic; 85.6% women; and 50.0% with a graduate level education) reported an average headache pain intensity of 6.7/10 (SD = 2.0). One-third (36.0%) reported chronic migraine, and half (51.5%) reported severe migraine-related disability. Lower acceptance was associated with severe migraine-related disability, t(54) = 4.13, P < .001. Higher activity engagement was associated with lower average headache pain intensity (r = -.30, P = .011). Higher acceptance was associated with lower levels of depression (r = -.48, P < .001) and anxiety symptoms (r = -.37, P = .003). Pain willingness and activity engagement serially mediated relationships between depression symptoms and severe migraine-related disability (indirect effect = 0.05, 95% CI = 0.01, 0.15), and between anxiety symptoms and severe migraine-related disability (indirect effect = 0.12, 95% CI = 0.02, 0.31).
Conclusion: Results provided preliminary support for a theoretical pathway by which psychiatric symptoms may influence migraine-related disability, in part, through their relationships with pain willingness and activity engagement.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6020159 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/head.13325 | DOI Listing |
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