The A to Z of Headaches
You are here:
Directory | Headaches | Child Migraine
Kids Suffering From Migraines
By Wendy Simons
Children with migraines often exhibit many of the same personality traits as adult sufferers, including anxiety, tension, and perfectionism. They also seem vulnerable to the same factors of diet, hunger, fatigue, and a change in routine that trigger adult migraines. Similarly, stressful or exciting events frequently set off a migraine attack in a susceptible teenager. Up until adolescence, boys and girls get migraine with same amount of frequency.
Tension-type headaches are not as common but do occur among children. As with adult tension headaches, the pain surrounds the head or forms a band around it and may involve neck tenderness and muscle spasms. And just like adults, kids that tend to react more strongly to stress in family or school situations, secrete more of the same adrenal hormones that are believed to initiate tension headaches. Reducing or eliminating emotional stress may be all that is needed to bring the headache problem under control in our kids.
Kids and teens feel pain as strongly as adults. When a headache strikes, they feel the same pounding head pain, nausea, vomiting, and aversion to light and sound that adults endure. Although a wide range of physical factors including fever, eye-strain, motion sickness, ear infections, measles and mumps can trigger headaches, hormones play a central role as well.
The hormonal basis for migraine in children is thought to be much the same as in adults, involving the neurotransmitter hormones serotonin, adrenaline, and noradrenaline. But the symptoms of headache in children may be very different from those found in adults.
In childhood migraine, the aura phase may be characterized by dramatic neurological manifestations including confusion, listlessness, painful sensitivity to light, fever, hallucinations, dilated pupils, or difficulty speaking.
In one form of childhood migraine known as basilar artery migraine, children may experience weakness or numbness on both sides of the body, vision problems, temporary balance problems, or dizziness during the aura phase. In basilar artery migraine, the blood vessels that feed the brain from the back of the neck and head can be constricted. The back of the brain is where the balance mechanisms are present.
However, during the "headache" phase of an attack children with migraine may not experience head pain at all. Although they may suffer severe abdominal pain instead. Doctors call this phenomenon "abdominal migraine" or "migraine equivalent," and it may be compounded by motion sickness or recurrent bouts of nausea and vomiting that can last for several days.
Abdominal migraine often develops into a more typical migraine headache pattern later in life. It is thought that colic found in some children may be early migraine symptoms. Migraine equivalents other than abdominal pain include sudden mood changes, dizziness, blurred vision, unexplained fatigue, food cravings, nausea, or loss of appetite.
These symptoms may be explained partially by the fact that serotonin acts as both a neurotransmitter and a hormone. In this dual role it mediates many different body functions. When serotonin is initially released and then flushed from the body during the biochemical dysfunction that causes headache, a variety of other body functions may go wrong as well.
Author Details:
Wendy Simons, writes for various websites, mainly about skin care, microdermabrasion and other health matters. If you are looking for further information try these migraine articles from Simply Top
Source: The A to Z of Headaches
NOTE: This article may be reproduced ONLY if this note, the article source, the author details with all links remaining active and in place.
Related Headache Articles:
- Headaches
- 3 Characteristics Of Sinus Headaches
- 6 Common Headache Triggers
- 9 Possible Causes Of Migraines And Headaches
- 10 Ways To Treat A Migraine
- An Alternative Way To Control Your Headache
- An Interesting History Lesson On Headaches
- Dietary Triggers For Headache Sufferers
- Headache & Migraines: Triggered By Emotional Causes
- Headaches During Sexual Intercourse
- How To Get Rid Of Your Headaches By Changing Your Lifestyle
- How To Treat A Migraine When You Are Pregnant
- Important Facts About Over-The-Counter Migraine Medication
- Keeping A Migraine Journal
- Kids Suffering From Migraines
- Knowing When It's Time To See A Doctor For Severe Headaches and Migraines
- Medications To Help With Migraine Attacks
- More Factors That May Trigger A Headache
- Painful Chain Reactions Caused By Migraines
- Statistics On Headaches And Migraines
- The Importance Of Knowing Your Migraine History
- Treating Headaches And Migraines In Children
- Understanding The Different Symptoms Of A Migraine
- What Is A Tension Headache?
- What Triggers Your Headache?
- Why Do More Women Get Headaches Than Men?
Straight to the point short articles about the headache:
- Benefits Of Muscle Relaxation In Relieving Headaches And Migraine
- Can You Get A Headache From Eating Chips?
- Female Hormones And Migraines
- Lack Of Sleep Can Trigger A Migraine Attack
- Melatonin: A Cure For Migraine?
- Other Headache And Migraine Triggers You May Not Know About
- Tips For Traveling Migraine Sufferers
- Understanding Cluster Headaches
- Understanding The Cause Of Rebound Headaches
- Using Chiropractic Methods To Relieve Migraines
Older Articles About Headaches:
- Causes of Migraine Headaches
- Chronic Headache
- Chronic Tension Headaches
- Cluster Headache Treatment
- Cluster Headaches
- Constant Headaches
- Frequent Headaches
- Headache Clinics
- Headache Medicine
- Headache Treatment
- Headache Types
- Hormonal Headaches
- Pressure Headaches
- Sinus Headache Symptoms
- Sinus Headache
- Stress Headaches
- Tension Headache Symptoms
- Tension Headache
- Vascular Headaches
Directory | Headaches |