Détail du document
Identifiant

doi:10.1186/s10194-024-01728-z...

Auteur
García-Azorín, David Santana-López, Laura Lozano-Alonso, José Eugenio Ordax-Díez, Ana Vega-Alonso, Tomas Macias Saint-Gerons, Diego González-Osorio, Yésica Rojo-Rello, Silvia Eiros, José M. Sánchez-Martínez, Javier Sierra-Mencía, Álvaro Recio-García, Andrea Martín-Toribio, Alejandro Sanz-Muñoz, Ivan Guerrero-Peral, Ángel Luis
Langue
en
Editeur

BioMed Central

Catégorie

Medicine & Public Health

Année

2024

Date de référencement

14/02/2024

Mots clés
headache disorders virus diseases migraine infections public health vaccines influenza patients symptoms consequences infection 95%ci headache study associated presence = 0
Métrique

Résumé

Headache is a common symptom of influenza infection; however, its causes and consequences remain uncertain.

In this manuscript, we analyzed which demographic and clinical factors were associated with the presence of headache during the course of influenza infection and whether patients with headache had a different prognosis, evaluated by need of hospitalization, sick leave or school absenteeism.

The influence study (NCT05704335) was an observational study that analyzed data routinely collected from the Health Sentinel Network between 2010 and 2020.

During the study period, 7832 cases were considered, among which, 5275 (67.4%) reported headache.

The presence of headache was independently associated with myalgia (2.753; 95%CI: 2.456–3.087, P  < 0.001), asthenia (OR: 1.958; 95%CI: 1.732–2.214, P  < 0.001), shivering (OR: 1.925; 95%CI: 1.718–2.156, P  < 0.001), nasopharyngeal erythema (OR: 1.505; 95%CI: 1.293–1.753, P  < 0.001), fever (OR: 1.469; 95%CI: 1.159–1.861; P  = 0.001), sudden onset of symptoms (OR: 1.380; 95%CI: 1.120–1.702, p  = 0.004), female sex (OR: 1.134; 95%CI: 1.023–1.257, P  = 0.018), and gastrointestinal symptoms (OR: 1.169; 95%CI: 1.039–1.315; P  = 0.01).

Patients with headache had a sex and age adjusted lower odds of being referred to the hospital (OR: 0.463; 95%CI: 0.264–0.812, P  = 0.007) and a higher odd of having a sick leave and/or school absenteeism (absenteeism (OR: 1.342; 95%CI: 1.190–1.514, P  < 0.001).

In conclusion, the presence of headache seems associated with symptoms caused by the innate immune response.

These findings support a headache pathophysiology linked with the innate immune response.

Due to the potential negative consequences and its treatable nature, clinicians should systematically evaluate it and, whenever necessary, treat it too.

García-Azorín, David,Santana-López, Laura,Lozano-Alonso, José Eugenio,Ordax-Díez, Ana,Vega-Alonso, Tomas,Macias Saint-Gerons, Diego,González-Osorio, Yésica,Rojo-Rello, Silvia,Eiros, José M.,Sánchez-Martínez, Javier,Sierra-Mencía, Álvaro,Recio-García, Andrea,Martín-Toribio, Alejandro,Sanz-Muñoz, Ivan,Guerrero-Peral, Ángel Luis, 2024, Factors associated to the presence of headache in patients with influenza infection and its consequences: a 2010–2020 surveillance-based study, BioMed Central

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