Repeated Measures of Recent Headache, Neck and Upper Back Pain in Australian Adolescents
- 1 July 2006
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Cephalalgia
- Vol. 26 (7), 843-851
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2982.2006.01120.x
Abstract
The epidemiological and clinical literature identifies strong associations between adult headache, cervical and thoracic spine dysfunction and spinal posture. This paper reports on the prevalence and incidence of headache, neck and upper back pain which occurred in the previous week, in urban Australians aged 13–17 years. Commencing in 1999, we followed a cohort of South Australian students through 5 years of secondary schooling. Of our commencing cohort of students, 132 (30±) provided data on bodily pain every year. For both girls and boys, there was a significantly decreasing prevalence of headache over the study period, while neck pain and upper back pain increased. There was a significantly increasing trend over time for boys with upper back pain. Twenty percent of girls and boys consistently reported headache, neck pain or upper back pain over 5 years. The progression of early adolescent headaches to mid-adolescent neck and upper back pain potentially reflects the adolescents’ biomechanical responses to intrinsic and extrinsic imposts. This requires further investigation to understand the causes of adolescent headache, neck and upper thoracic pain.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Specific Exercise Program and Modification of Postural Alignment for Treatment of Cervicogenic Headache: A Case ReportJournal of Orthopaedic & Sports Physical Therapy, 2005
- Predictive Factors for Neck and Shoulder Pain: A Longitudinal Study in Young AdultsSpine, 2004
- Do pain problems in young school children persist into early adulthood? A 13‐year follow‐upEuropean journal of pain, 2004
- A Randomized Controlled Trial of Exercise and Manipulative Therapy for Cervicogenic HeadacheSpine, 2002
- Psychosocial Impact of Headache and Comorbidity with Other Pains among Swedish School AdolescentsHeadache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain, 2002
- Prevalence and characteristics of headache in Dutch schoolchildrenEuropean journal of pain, 2001
- Headache and the Cervical Spine: A Critical ReviewCephalalgia, 1997
- An Epidemiologic Study of Headache Among Children and Adolescents of Southern BrazilCephalalgia, 1996
- The Prevalence of Cervicogenic Headache in a Random Population Sample of 20–59 Year OldsSpine, 1995
- The adolescent growth spurt of boys and girls of the Harpenden Growth StudyAnnals of Human Biology, 1976