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Patients with migraine headaches are more likely than nonmigraineurs to have coexisting affective or anxiety disorders, stroke, epilepsy, or sleep disorders, Dr. Lawrence C. Newman said at the annual meeting of the American Headache Society.
Consider the following potential comorbidities in patients with migraine, said Dr. Newman of the Headache Institute, New York:
* Psychiatric disorders. People with migraine headache disorder are nearly five times more likely than nonmigraineurs to develop major depression during their life times, six times more likely to have a manic episode, three times more likely to have an anxiety disorder, and seven times more likely to ...
Source: HighBeam Research, Migraine's Fellow Travelers.