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Dive into the research topics where Dana P. Turner is active.

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Featured researches published by Dana P. Turner.


Pain | 2012

Stress and sleep duration predict headache severity in chronic headache sufferers

Timothy T. Houle; Ross A. Butschek; Dana P. Turner; Todd A. Smitherman; Jeanetta C. Rains; Donald B. Penzien

Summary Recent stress history and sleep quantity affect headache intensity for sufferers who experience daily or near‐daily headaches. ABSTRACT The objective of this study was to evaluate the time‐series relationships between stress, sleep duration, and headache pain among patients with chronic headaches. Sleep and stress have long been recognized as potential triggers of episodic headache (<15 headache days/month), though prospective evidence is inconsistent and absent in patients diagnosed with chronic headaches (⩾15 days/month). We reanalyzed data from a 28‐day observational study of chronic migraine (n = 33) and chronic tension‐type headache (n = 22) sufferers. Patients completed the Daily Stress Inventory and recorded headache and sleep variables using a daily sleep/headache diary. Stress ratings, duration of previous nights’ sleep, and headache severity were modeled using a series of linear mixed models with random effects to account for individual differences in observed associations. Models were displayed using contour plots. Two consecutive days of either high stress or low sleep were strongly predictive of headache, whereas 2 days of low stress or adequate sleep were protective. When patterns of stress or sleep were divergent across days, headache risk was increased only when the earlier day was characterized by high stress or poor sleep. As predicted, headache activity in the combined model was highest when high stress and low sleep occurred concurrently during the prior 2 days, denoting an additive effect. Future research is needed to expand on current findings among chronic headache patients and to develop individualized models that account for multiple simultaneous influences of headache trigger factors.


Headache | 2013

Causality and headache triggers

Dana P. Turner; Todd A. Smitherman; Vincent T. Martin; Donald B. Penzien; Timothy T. Houle

The objective of this study was to explore the conditions necessary to assign causal status to headache triggers.


Headache | 2013

Natural Experimentation Is a Challenging Method for Identifying Headache Triggers

Timothy T. Houle; Dana P. Turner

In this study, we set out to determine whether individual headache sufferers can learn about the potency of their headache triggers (causes) using only natural experimentation.


Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports | 2016

Managing Migraine During Pregnancy and Lactation.

Rebecca Erwin Wells; Dana P. Turner; Michelle Lee; Laura Bishop; Lauren Strauss

While over half of women with migraine report improvement during pregnancy, having a history of migraine may increase the chance of negative health outcomes. The state of pregnancy increases the risk of several dangerous secondary headache disorders, especially those associated with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, and providers need to know the red flags to diagnose and treat emergently. Non-pharmacological migraine treatments can be instituted in advance of pregnancy as many are considered the safest options during pregnancy, but understanding the safety of medications and dietary supplements ensures appropriate care for the refractory migraine patient. New controversy exists over the safety of several historically routine and safe migraine treatment options in pregnancy, such as magnesium, acetaminophen, ondansetron, and butalbital. While it is not clear if breastfeeding decreases the postpartum recurrence of migraine, understanding safe treatment options during lactation can allow women to continue breastfeeding while achieving migraine relief.


Pain | 2015

Are migraine and tension-type headache diagnostic types or points on a severity continuum? An exploration of the latent taxometric structure of headache.

Dana P. Turner; Todd A. Smitherman; Anna Katherine Black; Donald B. Penzien; John A.H. Porter; Kenneth R. Lofland; Timothy T. Houle

Abstract The objective of this study was to assess whether migraine and tension-type headache (TTH) are best viewed as discrete entities or points on a severity continuum using taxometric analysis. Historically, classification systems have conceptualized the primary headache disorders of migraine and TTH as fundamentally different disorders that are differentiated by their characteristic symptom profiles and, as such, imply differing pathophysiologies and required treatments. Despite this categorical nosology, findings continue to emerge suggesting that migraine and TTH instead reflect dimensions of severity within the same headache construct. However, few studies have assessed this issue using taxometric statistical analyses or investigated how this taxonomic structure varies as a function of age and headache frequency. We conducted a latent-mode factor analysis of headache symptomatology obtained from 3449 individuals with headache from 2 previous, large-scale cross-sectional studies of primary headache sufferers (Martin et al., 2005, and Smitherman and Kolivas, 2013). Stratified taxometric analyses suggest that the validity of a categorical vs dimensional classification varies as a function of sample characteristics. Specifically, graphical results revealed that high headache frequency (>15 d/mo) and younger age (<24 years old) were associated with unimodal distributions suggestive of a dimensional construct of primary headache, whereas lower headache frequency and older age were associated with bimodal distributions characteristic of discrete diagnostic entities. Conceptualizing primary headache as a severity continuum was supported for young adults and those with frequent headaches. The distinctions of a categorical classification system were supported for adults (>24 years old) and those with infrequent headache.


Journal of Clinical Neuroscience | 2014

Nighttime snacking, stress, and migraine activity.

Dana P. Turner; Todd A. Smitherman; Donald B. Penzien; John A.H. Porter; Vincent T. Martin; Timothy T. Houle

Missing meals and fasting have long been reported as headache triggers. Stress also has received attention for its role in precipitating headaches. This study explored the effects of eating behaviors on new-onset headache. Analyzing only the 1070 of 1648 (64.9%) diary days that followed a non-headache day, the study included 34 migraineurs who contributed a median (25th, 75th percentile) of 28 (22, 40) days of diary entries. Multivariable survival modeling with random effects was conducted, and hazards ratios and 95% confidence intervals were calculated. Nighttime snacking was associated with a 40% reduction in the odds of experiencing a headache compared to having no food (p=0.013). Eating a late dinner was associated with a 21% reduction in the odds of headache when compared to no additional food, but this association was not statistically significant (p=0. 22). These results demonstrate the potential for eating behaviors to be targeted in headache management, as regulated eating habits may have the potential to reduce the occurrence of headache. Although no causal relationship can be established, these results indicate that further research into the mechanisms of the association between eating behaviors and headache activity is warranted.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2014

Hemodynamic Response to Fluid Management in Children Undergoing Dexmedetomidine Sedation for MRI

Keira P. Mason; Dana P. Turner; Timothy T. Houle; Paulette J. Fontaine; Jerrold Lerman

OBJECTIVE Dexmedetomidine is administered for pediatric sedation for MRI studies. It has the advantage of preserving respiratory function and producing a sedation state identical to that of natural sleep. It can, however, cause a dose-dependent decrease in systemic blood pressure in children. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether i.v. fluid loading with normal saline solution before the initiation of dexmedetomidine administration would affect the frequency of hypotension. MATERIALS AND METHODS Quality assurance data on consecutively registered children who were sedated with dexmedetomidine for MRI were reviewed. All children received a bolus of 3 μg/kg dexmedetomidine followed by a continuous infusion of 2 mg/ kg/h. A normal saline fluid bolus consisting of 0, 10, or 20 mL/kg was administered to each child within 1 hour before initiation of dexmedetomidine administration. Hypotension was defined as a greater than 20% decrease in mean arterial blood pressure from baseline. RESULTS Sedation was administered to 1692 children. Data on fluid administration were missing in three cases. In the other cases, 252 (14.9%) children received 0 mL/kg of normal saline solution, 598 (35.3%) received 10 mL/kg, and 839 (49.6%) received 20 mL/kg. In a multiple logistic regression model controlled for confounding variables, the odds of development of hypotension with 10 mL/kg of fluid decreased 53% (odds ratio, 0.47; 95% CI, 0.28-0.79; p = 0.004) compared with 0 mL/kg. CONCLUSION Administration of 10 mL/kg of normal saline solution before the initiation of dexmedetomidine administration for pediatric MRI sedation is effective in decreasing the incidence of observed hypotension.


Headache | 2012

Predictors of Headache Before, During, and After Pregnancy: A Cohort Study

Dana P. Turner; Todd A. Smitherman; James C. Eisenach; Donald B. Penzien; Timothy T. Houle

Objective.— The present study endeavored to identify predictors of headache during pregnancy, shortly after delivery, and at 8‐week follow‐up.


Headache | 2013

Rounding Behavior in the Reporting of Headache Frequency Complicates Headache Chronification Research

Timothy T. Houle; Dana P. Turner; Thomas A. Houle; Todd A. Smitherman; Vincent T. Martin; Donald B. Penzien; Richard B. Lipton

To characterize the extent of measurement error arising from rounding in headache frequency reporting (days per month) in a population sample of headache sufferers.


Headache | 2013

Methodological Issues in Studying Rates and Predictors of Migraine Progression and Remission

Richard B. Lipton; Donald B. Penzien; Dana P. Turner; Todd A. Smitherman; Timothy T. Houle

The progression and remission of migraine and the risk factors that determine the course of illness have been intensively studied for the past decade.

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Donald B. Penzien

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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Richard B. Lipton

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Ahmed A. Arif

University of North Carolina at Charlotte

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