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The Journal of Headache and Pain logoLink to The Journal of Headache and Pain
. 2009 Dec 1;11(1):1–3. doi: 10.1007/s10194-009-0173-8

Epidemiology of headache in Arab countries

Hani T S Benamer 1,, Dirk Deleu 2, Donald Grosset 3
PMCID: PMC3452181  PMID: 19949829

Abstract

The epidemiology of headache in Arab countries was systematically reviewed through Medline identification of four papers reporting headache prevalence in the Arab nations of Qatar, Saudi Arabia (2 papers) and Oman. The prevalence of headache varied from 8 to 12% in Saudi Arabia to 72.5% in Qatar and 83.6% in Oman. Headache was commoner in females and younger people. The prevalence of tension headache was 3.1–9.5% in Saudi Arabia and the 1-year prevalence in Qatar was 11.2%. The migraine prevalence was 2.6–5% in Saudi Arabia and 7.9% in Qatar, while the 1-year migraine prevalence was 10.1% in Oman. The results show a migraine prevalence within that estimated worldwide. However, it is clear that epidemiological data from Arab countries are lacking, and there is disparity in the reported prevalence from Saudi Arabia when compared with its two neighbours, Qatar and Oman. Wider study adopting the same methodology in the six Gulf countries (Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman, Bahrain, United Arab Emirates and Kuwait) is needed to examine variations in headache and migraine prevalence.

Keywords: Headache, Migraine, Prevalence, Epidemiology, Arab countries

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Acknowledgments

No funding was received for this work, and hence the authors are independent of any funding source.

No ethics approval is required for this work.

Conflict of interest

None.

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