one more bite

comorbidades psiquiátricas em enxaqueca: o papel do comportamento alimentar

Artigo da 5f

Desta vez o artigo é bem recente, acabou de sair na revista Arquivos de Neuropsiquiatria, escrevi um editorial sobre comorbidades psiquiátricas em enxaqueca, dando destaque ao comportamento alimentar e sua importância no manejo da enxaqueca.

One more bite in the understanding of migraine psychiatric comorbidity: the role of eating attitudes  

ou Uma porção a mais no entendimento das comorbidades psiquiátricas em migrânea: o papel do comportamento alimentar.

 

one more bite
enxaqueca alimentar

https://www.scielo.br/pdf/anp/2020nahead/1678-4227-anp-0004-282×20200123.pdf

 

Hamanci et  al.1 studied 91 episodic migraine patients and 84 non-headache, non-pain controls detailing psychiatric comorbidity, impact, and quality of life scales. Eating behavior was investigated by the Eating Attitude Test (EAT), added to the usual anxiety-depression and personality axis evaluations2 . A score equal to or higher than 30 on EAT was found in 23% of migraine patients, 2.4 times more frequent in migraine subjects than in controls. EAT scores were higher in migraine vs. controls. Associations between migraine and eating disorders were related to headache severity, depression, anxiety, quality of life, neuroticism personality traits, and less education.

What is yet to be determined is whether dysfunctional eating attitudes are cause, consequence, or even originated from other mechanisms such as genetics, culture, or lifestyle, thus influencing both migraine and psychiatric comorbidities. A cross-sectional design would not provide enough data to reply to those questions, such as a longitudinal study could3 . Eating behavior evaluation should be part of headache care. It has many clinical implications, is part of human existence, and is a critical feature in aspects well-linked to headache management such as obesity, metabolic disorders, migraine triggers, and psychiatric comorbidities.

Abnormal eating habits may reflect a wide range of psychiatric issues, including the comorbidity of eating disorders (binge eating, anorexia nervosa), decreased or increased eating secondary to depression, anxiety, and obsessive-compulsive behavior4 . Social pressure and weight stigma may be additional factors for stress in migraine patients. The EAT scale is a 26-item questionnaire covering those features. Additional components of eating habits, however, are also important to be ascertained in headache patients, such as the quality, amount, and schedule of food intake and food craving as a migraine prodrome. Fasting is one of the main triggers mentioned in migraine journals. Abnormal intake of certain foods or ingredients may also cause more headache episodes, such as caffeine, lactose, sugar or sweeteners, citric fruits, gluten, nuts, salt, alcohol, meat, sausages, and ice cream5 .

The cause-effect relationship, however, is not clearly established. Patients may not be aware of food triggers, or the dietary item may not be consistent as a causative agent. One may also address meals schedule so hypoglycemia is ruled out as a precipitating factor6 . In addition, craving for certain foods, such as sweets, chocolate, and carbohydrates, may be part of a migraine prodrome. Identifying this symptom may help prevent an upcoming migraine episode. Although considered to be a hypothalamic driven event, through orexinergic pathways7 , excessive intake of chocolate or other caloric foods can be confounded as a migraine trigger. Since these items are known to have anxiolytic effects, a plausible explanation is that anxiety comes first, caloric food is ingested in order to overcome it, and headaches emerge due to the high anxiety levels and not necessarily to the type of food intake. Let us take a deeper look into eating habits in headache management.

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