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Dive into the research topics where Christian Wöber is active.

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Featured researches published by Christian Wöber.


Cephalalgia | 1999

Psychosocial factors in children and adolescents with migraine and tension‐type headache: a controlled study and review of the literature

Andreas Karwautz; Christian Wöber; T Lang; A Böck; C Wagner-Ennsgraber; Christine Vesely; Christian Kienbacher; Çiçek Wöber-Bingöl

We investigated 341 children and adolescents to evaluate the relevance of psychosocial factors in idiopathic headache. According to the criteria of the International Headache Society, 151 subjects had migraine and 94 had tension-type headache (TTH). Ninety-six subjects were headache-free controls. Psychosocial factors covered family and housing conditions, school problems, relations in the peer group, and several other items. We found that migraine patients did not differ from headache-free controls. Patients with TTH more often had divorced parents than the headache-free controls, and they had fewer peer relations than migraineurs and controls. In addition, migraine patients were significantly more often absent from school due to headache. All other psychosocial factors failed to discriminate between the three study groups. In conclusion, this controlled study in children and adolescents suggests that migraine is not related to family and housing conditions, school situation, or peer relations, whereas TTH is associated with a higher rate of divorced parents and fewer peer relations.


Cephalalgia | 1995

Diagnosis of headache in childhood and adolescence : a study in 437 patients

Çiçek Wöber-Bingöl; Christian Wöber; Andreas Karwautz; Christine Vesely; C Wagner-Ennsgraber; Gp Amminger; K Zebenholzer; J Geldner; W Baischer; B Schuch

We investigated whether the criteria for idiopathic headache published by the International Headache Society (IHS) are useful in childhood and adolescence and compared the diagnoses according to this classification with those of Vahlquist. We used a semi-structured questionnaire to examine a total of 437 children and adolescents referred consecutively to a headache outpatient clinic. Twenty-eight of 437 patients were excluded because of symptomatic or unclassifiable headache. Of 409 patients with idiopathic headache, 70.4% had definite migraine or tension-type headache (IHS 1.1, 1.2, 2.1, 2.2), 20.5% had a migrainous disorder (IHS 1.7) and 9.1% had headache of the tension-type not fulfilling the criteria (IHS 2.3). In the differential diagnosis of migraine and tension-type headache the intensity of pain, aggravation of headache by physical activity, nausea and vomiting were the most important features. The quality of pain, photo- and phonophobia were less helpful and location least important. The duration of migraine attacks was less than 2 h in 19.0% of the migraine patients. In general, the diagnostic criteria of migraine were highly specific but less sensitive, and those of tension-type headache highly sensitive but less specific. The agreement between IHS criteria and those of Vahlquist was marked (kappa = 0.57). We conclude that the IHS criteria are useful for classifying headache in children and adolescents referred to a headache outpatient clinic. A forthcoming modification of the IHS criteria should consider a reduction of the minimum duration of migraine attacks from 2 h to I h and should try to increase the sensitivity of the criteria for migraine and the specificity of the criteria for tension-type headache.


Cephalalgia | 1996

Long-Term Outcome of Patients with Headache and Drug Abuse after Inpatient Withdrawal: Five-Year Follow-Up

P Schnider; S Aull; Christoph Baumgartner; A Marterer; Christian Wöber; Karl Zeiler; Peter Wessely

Thirty-eight patients with “chronic daily” headache and ergotamine and/or analgesics abuse according to the criteria proposed by the international Headache Society were re-investigated 5 years after inpatient drug withdrawal. At the end of the observation period, 19 patients (50.0%) had their headaches on only 8 days per month or less, 18 patients (47.4%) were free of symptoms or had only mild headaches. A close correlation was found between the frequency of headache and the duration of drug abuse, as well as between the intensity of headache and the number of tablets taken per month. Frequency and intensity of headache had changed within the first 2 years after withdrawal, but remained stable afterwards. Fifteen patients (39.5%) reported on recurrent drug abuse. Patients with migraine showed a tendency towards a better prognosis compared to patients with tension-type headache or with combined migraine and tension-type headache. The results of this study highlight the long-term efficacy of inpatient drug withdrawal in patients with headache and ergotamine and/or analgesics abuse.


Cephalalgia | 2006

Clinical Features, Classification and Prognosis of Migraine and Tension-Type Headache in Children and Adolescents: A Long-Term Follow-Up Study

Christian Kienbacher; Christian Wöber; Heidi‐Elisabeth Zesch; A Hafferl-Gattermayer; Martin Posch; Andreas Karwautz; Arno Zormann; G. Berger; K Zebenholzer; A. Konrad; Çiçek Wöber-Bingöl

We performed a long-term follow-up examination in children and adolescents with migraine and tension-type headache (TTH) in order to investigate the evolution of clinical features and headache diagnoses, to compare International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD)-I and ICHD-II criteria and to identify prognostic factors. We re-examined 227 patients (52.4± female, age 17.6 ± 3.1 years) 6.6 ± 1.6 years after their first presentation to a headache centre using identical semistructured questionnaires. Of 140 patients initially diagnosed with migraine, 25.7± were headache free, 48.6± still had migraine and 25.7± had TTH at follow-up. Of 87 patients with TTH, 37.9± were headache free, 41.4± still had TTH and 20.7± had migraine. The number of subjects with definite migraine was higher in ICHD-II than in ICHD-I at baseline and at follow-up. The likelihood of a decrease in headache frequency decreased with a changing headache location at baseline (P < 0.0001), with the time between baseline and follow-up (P = 0.0019), and with an initial diagnosis of migraine (P = 0.014). Female gender and a longer time between headache onset and first examination tended to have an unfavourable impact. In conclusion, 30± of the children and adolescents presenting to a headache centre because of migraine or TTH become headache-free in the long-term. Another 20–25± shift from migraine to TTH or vice versa. ICHD-II criteria are superior to those of ICHD-I in identifying definite migraine in children and adolescents presenting to a headache centre. The prognosis is adversely affected by an initial diagnosis of migraine and by changing headache location, and it tends to be affected by an increasing time between headache onset and first presentation.


Headache | 1996

IHS criteria for migraine and tension-type headache in children and adolescents

Çiçek Wöber-Bingöl; Christian Wöber; C Wagner-Ennsgraber; Andreas Karwautz; Christine Vesely; K Zebenholzer; Julia Geldner

We investigated the influence of age on the IHS criteria for migraine and tension‐type headache in 437 consecutive children and adolescents and found the following age‐associated statistically significant differences: migraine duration, occurrence of migraine aura, and bilateral location of tension‐type headache were more often fulfilled by adolescents, whereas aggravation of headache by physical activity (in migrainous disorder) and photophobia (in migraine with aura) were more often fulfilled by children, Accordingly, there are only a few, differences concerning the fulfillment of the IHS criteria for migraine and tension‐type headache in children and adolescents. Independent of age, the intensity of headache and the presence or absence of nausea are most important for differentiating the two major types of idiopathic headache. The sensitivity of the IHS criteria for migraine could be increased by reducing the minimum duration of migraine and by allowing the diagnosis of migraine when severe headache is associated with nausea, even though the criteria of location, quality, and aggravation by physical activity are not fulfilled.


European Neurology | 1992

Spontaneous body sway as a function of sex, age, and vision: posturographic study in 30 healthy adults.

Harald Kollegger; Christoph Baumgartner; Christian Wöber; W. Oder; Lüder Deecke

Detailed neurological examinations and body sway measurements with a stable force measuring platform were carried out on 30 healthy adults between 21 and 63 years of age. The results were analyzed for sex- and age-associated changes with regard to three different sway components (total sway, anterio-posterior sway, lateral sway) and two different conditions (eyes open, eyes closed). Sex-associated differences were highly significant for all sway components in the oldest age group (51-65 years) in which men exhibited more spontaneous postural sway than women in the condition eyes open. With eyes closed these differences increased. Middle-aged men (36-50 years) also exhibited significantly more postural sway than women of the same age. In the condition eyes open especially total sway and anterioposterior sway were increased, whereas in the condition eyes closed total sway and lateral sway were predominantly higher in men than in women. In the youngest age group (21-35 years) no sex-related differences in postural sway were found. Age-associated differences were significant for anterioposterior sway (eyes open) in men, increasing continuously from the young to the middle-aged, and again from the middle-aged to the older age group. Anterioposterior sway in women, on the contrary, did not change with age. Age-associated differences in women were found for total sway (eyes open) and lateral sway (eyes closed). However, the highest values for total sway and lateral sway within the female group were obtained from young women in both conditions eyes open and eyes closed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Cephalalgia | 2004

Clinical features of migraine: a cross‐sectional study in patients aged three to sixty‐nine

Çiçek Wöber-Bingöl; Christian Wöber; Andreas Karwautz; A. Auterith; M Serim; K Zebenholzer; K Aydinkoc; Christian Kienbacher; C Wanner; P Wessely

We investigated 260 consecutive patients classified as migraine cases aged 3-69 at two tertiary headache centres, one for children and adolescents and the other for adults to evaluate the relationship between age and clinical features of migraine cross-sectionally. We only included subjects with definite migraine without or with aura and we excluded subjects with coexisting tension-type headache, medication overuse and/or other clinically relevant disorders. The percentage of males decreased markedly from childhood to adulthood and this affected the evalution of age-related changes in male patients, as only large differences reached the level of statistical significance. In females, the headache duration and the prevalence of unilateral, pulsating pain, photophobia and phonophobia increased, whereas the prevalence of aggravation by physical activity decreased with age. In conclusion, this cross-sectional, clinic-based study on a strictly defined sample of 260 consecutive patients with definite migraine covering a wide range of age from the very young to the old suggests marked age-related differences of the clinical features of migraine in females and failed to demonstrate similar differences in males due to the small number of adult male migraineurs.


Cephalalgia | 2000

Migrainous disorder and headache of the tension-type not fulfilling the criteria: a follow-up study in children and adolescents

K Zebenholzer; Christian Wöber; C Kienbacher; Çiçek Wöber-Bingöl

In this follow-up study in children and adolescents with recurrent headaches classified as migrainous disorder (IHS 1.7) and headache of the tension-type not fulfilling the criteria (IHS 2.3), 28.6% were headache-free and 71.4% still had headaches 2-5 years after the first examination. The majority remained in the same one-digit IHS diagnosis, whereas 20% changed from migraine to tension-type headache or vice versa. The number of IHS criteria fulfilled increased significantly from the first to the second examination. The reason for diagnosing IHS 1.7 and IHS 2.3 most often was a short headache duration or headache characteristics not meeting the criteria. By reducing the minimum headache duration to 1 h, 11 of 58 patients could be diagnosed as migraine without aura. There was a remarkable overlap in the diagnostic criteria for migraine without aura and tension-type headache. In IHS 1.7 and IHS 2.3 this overlap exceeded 80%, with a trend to decrease at the second examination.


American Journal of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation | 1998

Functional impact of unvarying exercise program in women after menopause.

Katharina Kerschan; Yesim Alacamlioglu; Josef Kollmitzer; Christian Wöber; Alexandra Kaider; Manfred Hartard; Abdel-Halim Ghanem; Elisabeth Preisinger

Low bone mass, functional impairment, low muscle strength, and postural instability are predictors of the risk of fracture in an elderly person. The purpose of this study was to investigate the functional impact of an unvarying long-term exercise program to be carried out at home. The exercises had been shown to delay bone loss in an elderly population. At the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, University of Vienna, postmenopausal women who had been stratified into exercise or control groups 5 to 10 yr ago were called in for a follow-up examination. Frequency of training, habits, and pain causing disability in activities of daily living were recorded. Walking velocity, muscle strength, and postural stability were measured. Functional assessment, blood analysis, and x-rays of the spine were performed additionally. One hundred twenty-four women aged 68.3 +/- 6.8 yr (mean +/- SD) underwent a follow-up investigation at the outpatient clinic. After 7.7 +/- 1.1 yr the compliance of the training group was still 36%. Self-chosen gait velocity was slightly higher in the regular exercisers than in the controls. No intergroup differences were found for pain induced disability, muscle strength, body sway, and fracture rate. The pain disability index was significantly associated with corrected self-chosen gait velocity. The results suggest that an unvarying home-based exercise program may support general agility but does not yield enough force to improve muscle strength and postural stability in healthy, nondisabled, postmenopausal women who start exercising at the age of 60 yr. Further studies are needed to define more appropriate exercise programs for a comprehensive improvement of functional outcome in a population at high risk for osteoporosis.


Headache | 1996

Magnetic Resonance Imaging for Recurrent Headache in Childhood and Adolescence

Çiçek Wöber-Bingöl; Christian Wöber; Daniela Prayer; C Wagner-Ennsgraber; Andreas Karwautz; Christine Vesely; K Zebenholzer; Martha Feucht

We investigated 429 consecutive patients, aged 5 to 18 (mean: 11.0 ± 3.1) years, diagnosed with migraine or tension‐type headache. The patients underwent either MRI or exclusively clinical follow‐up examinations. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed normal findings in 82.3% and structural changes in 17.7%. However, the vast majority of these changes had minimal or no pathological relevance, and a causal relationship to the patient’s headache could not be proven in any case. In the non‐MRI group, clinical follow‐up examinations confirmed the initial diagnosis in all patients and MRI was not required in any of these subjects. In conclusion, our study shows a poor relation between recurrent headache fulfilling the criteria of migraine and tension‐type headache and structural changes incidentally detected by MRI. In addition, it suggests that clinical follow‐up examinations are reliable. Accordingly, MRI is not required for routine examination of recurrent headache in children and adolescents, but it should be performed in patients with abnormal neurological findings, atypical headache pattern, or significant change of preexisting headache.

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Andreas Karwautz

Medical University of Vienna

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Christian Kienbacher

Medical University of Vienna

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