Association Between Trigger Surprisal and Tension-Type Headache Attacks
Dana P. Turner, Twinkle Patel, Timothy T. Houle

TL;DR
The study found that unexpected events (surprisal) are linked to migraine attacks but not tension-type headaches in people with migraines.
Contribution
This is the first study to investigate the relationship between surprisal and tension-type headache attacks in individuals with episodic migraine.
Findings
Migraine attacks were strongly associated with higher surprisal scores.
Tension-type headache attacks showed weak and nonsignificant associations with surprisal.
No consistent patterns were found in tension-type headaches when considering nonlinear or contextual factors.
Abstract
The causes of individual headache attacks are commonly sought, yet the multiple potential influences make this task difficult. Information theory provides a framework for addressing this challenge by quantifying how unexpected an exposure is through surprisal. Prior research has shown that higher surprisal scores predict migraine onset, but the extent to which this relationship generalizes to tension-type headache remains unknown. This study aimed to determine whether surprisal is associated with incident tension-type headache attacks among individuals with episodic migraine. This secondary analysis proceeded from a prospective daily diary study in which 109 participants with migraine recorded potential triggers, headache activity, and symptoms twice daily for up to 28 days. Surprisal values were computed from person-specific probability distributions of diary responses, aggregated to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMigraine and Headache Studies · Musculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation · Cardiovascular Syncope and Autonomic Disorders
