Most headaches occurring in children are fortunately benign and do not indicate a serious disease. Many adults begin experiencing headaches during childhood so it is particularly important to address the headaches when they first begin. Headaches such as migraines are genetically linked and so may occur in more than one family member.
Types of Headaches in Children
It can be quite difficult for children to describe headaches in detail and this can make diagnosis and treatment challenging for doctors and parents. In general, there are primary headaches, which develop by themselves and where the causes are not typically known and secondary headaches, which develop from an underlying illness or injury. Primary headaches include migraines, tension headaches and cluster headaches.
Migraine Children who experience migraines often do so based on genetics. During a migraine, blood vessels constrict or dilate. Migraine symptoms resulting from these vascular changes include problems with vision and balance as well as nausea, vomiting, dizziness and pain.
Tension Headache
Most children's headaches are tension ones, and are due to issues such as stress, poor sleep patterns, food and food additives or environmental triggers. A small percentage of children suffering from tension headaches will develop chronic headaches, which occur on a daily or near daily basis.
Cluster Headache
These are uncommon in children but are often extremely painful. They involve pain on one side of the head. Because they are quite sharp and cause a great deal of discomfort, they can be disabling and disruptive to the child's functioning in school if occurring on a regular basis.
Secondary Headaches, Prompted by an Underlying Injury Include:
* Head injury * Concussion * Viral infection such as meningitis * Bacterial infections * Medication side effects * Sinus disease * Tumours
Treating Headaches in Children
Treating a child's headaches involves both prevention strategies and treatment for the headache itself. It is important to ensure the child receives enough sleep each night and that water intake is adequate.
Obtaining enough fluids from foods and beverages will help to prevent dehydration, which can lead to headaches. A headache diary might be useful to determine when headaches are occurring; this can aid in narrowing down a trigger such as a particular food or an environmental factor.
Also be sure that your child eats healthy meals regularly as low blood sugar can prompt a headache. Providing additional nutritious snacks throughout the day can help to maintain a more consistent blood sugar.
Try to help your child avoid stressors whenever possible. Some are inevitable, such as exams, but working with your child to develop ways to cope can help to prevent headaches.
Counselling may be helpful if your child's headaches are triggered by emotional reactions to stress. For relief of immediate headache symptoms, over-the-counter medications such as acetominophen and ibuprofen are often effective. They also lower fevers and are therefore particularly helpful if your child's headache is fever related. Prescription medications are more likely to be prescribed for a child who experiences migraines. These may include ergotamine, triptan medications, antidepressants and calcium channel blockers. Any treatment of a secondary headache will involve treatment of the underlying illness or disorder.
It can be difficult for children to articulate their discomfort when headache pain strikes, particularly toddlers, but with careful attention and preventative measures in conjunction with any advice from a physician, your kids can handle headaches better. For a kid, fewer headaches means more time doing what kids do best: playing.
As the world battles with an epidemic that is proving difficult to manage and showing signs of becoming a costly affair, our children are getting caught in the cross fire. Adult onset diabetes, weight loss surgery and weight loss medication for children is not exactly what parent had in mind when planning for their posterity.
An article by Kids Health highlights some report that shows that as many as 45% of U.S children newly diagnosed with diabetes have Type 2. One of the main causes is pointing towards obesity in children and teens.
Type 2 diabetes was formally considered to occur exclusively in adults hence its previous long time name Adult Onset Diabetes, as opposed to Type 1 diabetes which was referred to as Juvenile Diabetes.
Diabetes is a disease whereby your body is unable to control glucose accordingly. This results to abnormal levels of blood sugar. In Type 2, the body is unable to respond to insulin, a hormone that regulates the amount of glucose in the blood stream. The condition is also known as insulin resistance.
Among adults it is an accompanying disease of obesity. 80% of obese individuals suffer from Type 2 diabetes. Similar trends seem to be creeping into children and teens. And why not, children are living a similar lifestyle as their parents. Infact obese and overweight children often are found in families were at least one parent is overweight or obese; yet another strong indicator that obesty is a lifestyle issue.
Andrew L. Young, Director of the Future of Children and other Economic studies programs projects of Brookings Institutions, laments of "screen-addicted recess-and-P.E deprived, parent-chauffeured children" who are living a lifestyle that is "dangerous to their health" in an article titled Let's get children moving toward a healthier future.
Statistics are not only grim in the U.S. In Canada child obesity cases are also on the increase. In 1978/79 only 3% of children 2-17 years were obese according to Canada Community Healthy Survey (CCHS). By 2004, the numbers had nearly tripled to 8%. The overweight had doubled from 14% to 29% as reported in The Daily. All this is attributed to lifestyles primarily diet and exercises
In U.K were the epidemic is raising, weight loss pills and weight loss surgery are being suggested for obese children! The National Institute for Health and Clinical Studies (NICE) is reported in the BBC News as proposing surgeries for physiologically mature kids and pills for the younger ones.
NICE is an independent organization in London that provides national guidance on the promotion of good health and prevention and treatment of ill health. It's a membership includes National Institute of Health (NIH U.K), healthcare professional and academicians.
Obesity is a multi-factorial condition that requires a holistic and long-term approach. It is this view organization like NICE and others of similar wide influence should really concentrate on for weight loss management. Though in the short term matters are really pressing, they should not lose sight of the long-haul. The permanent weight loss solution lays in the latter rather than the former.
Both Alien & Mark Kimathi are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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