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Personality and Personality Disorders in Medication-Overuse Headache: A Controlled Study by SWAP-200

Authors :
Vittorio Lingiardi
Federica Galli
Patrizia Cristofalo
Grazia Sances
Micol Parolin
Cristina Tassorelli
Ivan Gualco
Alessandra Simonelli
Annalisa Tanzilli
Source :
Pain Research and Management, Vol 2019 (2019), Pain Research & Management
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Hindawi Limited, 2019.

Abstract

Background. Medication-overuse headache (MOH) is a type of chronic headache, whose mechanisms are still unknown. The impact of psychological factors has been matter of debate from different perspectives. The role of personality and personality pathology in processes involved in MOH development has been advanced but was poorly studied. The hypothesis of addiction-like behaviors sustaining the drug misuse has been examined and reached contrasting findings.Objectives. This study is aimed at detecting personality and its disorders (PDs) in MOH, with a specific attention to the addiction aspect.Methods. Eighty-eight MOH patients have been compared with two clinical populations including 99 patients with substance use disorder (SUD) and 91 with PDs using the Shedler-Westen Assessment Procedure-200 (SWAP-200), a clinician-report tool that assesses both normal and pathological personality. MANCOVAs were performed to evaluate personality differences among MOH, SUD, and PD groups, controlling for age and gender.Results. MOH patients were predominantly women and older. They showed lower traits of the SWAP-200’s cluster A and B disorders than SUD and PD patients, who presented more severe levels of personality impairment. No differences in the SWAP-200’s cluster C have been found, indicating common personality features in these populations. At levels of specific PDs, MOH patients showed higher obsessive and dysphoric traits and better overall psychological functioning than SUD and PD patients.Conclusion. Although MOH, SUD, and PD populations have been evaluated in multiple sites with different levels of expertise, the study supported the presence of a specific constellation of personality in MOH patients including obsessive (perfectionist) and dysphoric characteristics, as well as good enough psychological resources. No similarities to drug-addicted and personality-disordered patients were found. Practitioners’ careful understanding of the personality characteristics of MOH patients may be useful to provide a road map for the implementation of more effective treatment strategies and intervention programs.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19181523 and 12036765
Volume :
2019
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pain Research and Management
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....774cd046fba6b77ea8f87cfa00cc30b0