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Featured researches published by Trond Sand.


Spine | 1994

Neck pain in the general population

Gunnar Bovim; Harald Schrader; Trond Sand

Study Design A randomized cross-sectional questionnaire was used to determine the prevalence of neck pain in Norwegian adults. Objectives The frequency and duration of neck pain were assessed. Summary of Background Data Reliable epidemiologic studies on the prevalence of neck pain in the general population have been sparse. Methods A questionnaire that inquired about neck pain within the last year was sent to a random sample of 10,000 adult Norwegians. Results Overall, 34.4% of the responders had experienced neck pain within the last year. A total of 13.8% reported neck pain that lasted for more than 6 months. Conclusions Chronic neck pain is a frequent symptom in the general population, particularly in women. Although reservations have to be taken as to the interpretation, the reported prevalence of persisting pain after whiplash injuries is of the same magnitude as the prevalence of chronic neck pain in the general population.


The Lancet | 1996

Natural evolution of late whiplash syndrome outside the medicolegal context.

Harald Schrader; Gunnar Bovim; Trond Sand; D Obelieniene; D Siurkiene; D Mickevičiene; I Misevičiene

BACKGROUND In Lithuania, few car drivers and passengers are covered by insurance and there is little awareness among the general public about the potentially disabling consequences of a whiplash injury. We took this opportunity to study the natural course of head and neck symptoms after rear-end car collisions. METHODS In a retrospective questionnaire-based cohort study, 202 individuals (157 men; 45 women) were identified from the records of the traffic police department in Kaunas, Lithuania. These individuals were interviewed 1-3 years after experiencing a rear-end car collision. Neck pain, headache, subjective cognitive dysfunction, psychological disorders, and low back pain in this group were compared with the same complaints in a sex-matched and age-matched control group of uninjured individuals selected randomly from the population register of the same geographic area. FINDINGS Neck pain was reported by 71 (35% [95% CI 29-42]) accident victims and 67 (33% [27-40]) controls. Headache was reported by 107 (53% [46-60]) accident victims and 100 (50% [42-57]) controls. Chronic neck pain and chronic headache (more than 7 days per month) were also reported in similar proportions (17 [8.4%; 5-13] vs 14 [6.9%; 4-12] and 19 [9.4%; 6-15] vs 12 [5.9%; 3-10]) by the two groups. Of those who reported chronic neck pain or daily headache after the accident, substantial proportions had had similar symptoms before the accident (7/17 for chronic neck pain; 10/12 for daily headache). There was no significant difference found. No one in the study group had disabling or persistent symptoms as a result of the car accident. There was no relation between the impact severity and degree of pain. A family history of neck pain was the most important risk factor for current neck symptoms in logistic regression analyses. INTERPRETATION Our results suggest that chronic symptoms were not usually caused by the car accident. Expectation of disability, a family history, and attribution of pre-existing symptoms to the trauma may be more important determinants for the evolution of the late whiplash syndrome.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1999

Pain after whiplash: a prospective controlled inception cohort study

Harald Schrader; Gunnar Bovim; Irena Misevičiene; Trond Sand

OBJECTIVES In Lithuania, there is little awareness of the notion that chronic symptoms may result from rear end collisions via the so-called whiplash injury. After most such collisions no contact with the health service is established. An opportunity therefore exists to study post-traumatic pain without the confounding factors present in western societies. METHODS In a prospective, controlled inception cohort study, 210 victims of a rear end collision were consecutively identified from the daily records of the Kaunas traffic police. Neck pain and headache were evaluated by mailed questionnaires shortly after the accident, after 2 months, and after 1 year. As controls, 210 sex and age matched subjects were randomly taken from the population register of the same geographical area and evaluated for the same symptoms immediately after their identification and after 1 year. RESULTS Initial pain was reported by 47% of accident victims; 10% had neck pain alone, 18% had neck pain together with headache, and 19% had headache alone. The median duration of the initial neck pain was 3 days and maximal duration 17 days. The median duration of headache was 4.5 hours and the maximum duration was 20 days. After 1 year, there were no significant differences between the accident victims and the control group concerning frequency and intensity of these symptoms. CONCLUSIONS In a country were there is no preconceived notion of chronic pain arising from rear end collisions, and thus no fear of long term disability, and usually no involvement of the therapeutic community, insurance companies, or litigation, symptoms after an acute whiplash injury are self limiting, brief, and do not seem to evolve to the so-called late whiplash syndrome.


BMJ | 2001

Prophylactic treatment of migraine with angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor (lisinopril): randomised, placebo controlled, crossover study

Harald Schrader; Lars Jacob Stovner; Grether Helde; Trond Sand; Gunnar Bovim

Abstract Objective: To determine the efficacy of an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor in the prophylaxis of migraine. Design: Double blind, placebo controlled, crossover study. Setting: Neurological outpatient clinic. Participants: Sixty patients aged 19-59 years with migraine with two to six episodes a month. Interventions: Treatment period of 12 weeks with one 10 mg lisinopril tablet once daily for one week then two 10 mg lisinopril tablets once daily for 11 weeks, followed by a two week wash out period. Second treatment period of one placebo tablet once daily for one week and then two placebo tablets for 11 weeks. Thirty participants followed this schedule, and 30 received placebo followed by lisinopril. Main outcome measures: Primary end points: number of hours with headache, number of days with headache, number of days with migraine. Secondary end points: headache severity index, use of drugs for symptomatic relief, quality of life and number of days taken as sick leave, acceptability of treatment. Results: In the 47 participants with complete data, hours with headache, days with headache, days with migraine, and headache severity index were significantly reduced by 20% (95% confidence interval 5% to 36%), 17% (5% to 30%), 21% (9% to 34%), and 20% (3% to 37%), respectively, with lisinopril compared with placebo. Days with migraine were reduced by at least 50% in 14 participants for active treatment versus placebo and 17 patients for active treatment versus run-in period. Days with migraine were fewer by at least 50% in 14 participants for active treatment versus placebo. Intention to treat analysis of data from 55 patients supported the differences in favour of lisinopril for the primary end points. Conclusion: The angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor, lisinopril, has a clinically important prophylactic effect in migraine.


Cephalalgia | 2004

The prevalence of migraine and tension-type headaches among adolescents in Norway. The Nord-Trøndelag Health Study (Head-HUNT-Youth), a large population-based epidemiological study

John-Anker Zwart; Dyb G; Turid Lingaas Holmen; Lars Jacob Stovner; Trond Sand

The aim of this study was to examine the prevalence of headache and primary headache disorders like migraine and tension-type headaches among adolescents, and to explore the differences in headache prevalence and frequency by gender and age. This cross-sectional study was conducted in Nord-Trøndelag county, Norway, during the years 1995-97. In total, 8984 (88%) out of 10 202 invited adolescents aged 12-19 years participated in the youth part of the Nord-Trøndelag Health Study [Helseundersøkelsen i Nord-Trøndelag (HUNT)]. The total study population in this study consisted of 8255 individuals after exclusion of invalid questionnaires and students outside the target range of 13-18 years of age. The students completed a comprehensive questionnaire, and one of the questions was whether the students had experienced any headaches during the last 12 months. In addition, 5847 of these students were also subject to an interview in which they were asked whether they had experienced recurring headaches during the last year and, if so, were they classified as migraine (MI), tension-type headache (TTH) or non-classifiable headache. In the total questionnaire-based population, 76.8% reported having had headaches during the last 12 months (69.4% boys and 84.2% girls). Among those who also were interviewed, 29.1% reported having recurrent headaches (21.0% boys and 36.5% girls). The overall 1-year prevalence of migraine was 7%, of tension-type headache 18%, and of non-classifiable headache 4.8%. Higher prevalence rates were found for girls in all age groups and for all headache categories. The overall frequency of recurrent headaches did not vary significantly with age, but girls had significantly more frequent headaches than boys. We concluded that headache in general, and recurrent primary headache disorders like migraine and tension-type headaches, are common somatic complaints among Norwegian adolescents, especially among girls.


Scandinavian Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine | 1998

PRESSURE ALGOMETRY IN HEALTHY SUBJECTS: INTER-EXAMINER VARIABILITY

Fabio Antonaci; Trond Sand; Guilherme A. Lucas

The purpose of this study was to estimate inter-examiner reliability of head and neck algometry. Pain perception thresholds were assessed with a mechanical pressure algometer in 21 healthy individuals. Thresholds were assessed at 13 symmetrical points on each side of the head and neck, at the deltoid muscle and at the median finger. The pressure range of the instrument proved insufficient to study the pain perception threshold on the finger, however. Two different examiners carried out one or two examinations in each subject during one day. The sequence of investigations was varied randomly. The inter-examiner reliability was found to be good, with a mean intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) of 0.75. Intra-examiner reproducibility was excellent (mean ICC = 0.84). The mean inter-examiner coefficient of variation was 18.7%, while the mean coefficient of repeatability (CR) was 1.60 kg/cm2. In comparison, the mean intra-examiner coefficient of variation was 15% while the mean CR was 1.29 kg/cm2. Statistically significant differences between examiners were found for the frontal point (p < 0.01), while a trend towards lower thresholds in one of the two observers was seen in 10 of the 13 non-significant points. Inter-examiner reliability of side differences was excellent, with CR = 1.23 kg/cm2. In conclusion, manual algometry with a rather inexpensive mechanical device has a good to excellent inter-rater reliability. When studying patients, however, the possible bias introduced by different examiners should be taken into account, both regarding study design and data analysis.


Journal of Sleep Research | 1993

The prevalence of delayed and advanced sleep phase syndromes.

Harald Schrader; Gunnar Bovim; Trond Sand

SUMMARY  To determine the prevalence of the delayed sleep phase syndrome (DSPS) and the contrasting advanced sleep phase syndrome (ASPS), a cross‐sectional nationwide epidemiological study was performed in Norway. Screening questionnaires were sent to a random sample of 10,000 adult individuals (18–67 y), of both sexes, taken from the National register of Norway. The response rate was 77%. Diagnoses of DSPS and ASPS were based on International Classification of Sleep Disorders (ICSD) criteria. All individuals suspected of having DSPS or ASPS were requested to fill out a second questionnaire, and a sleep log for four weeks. Subjects for whom the suspicion of DSPS or ASPS could be upheld were contacted by telephone for a final confirmation.


Pain | 1992

Cervicogenic headache, migraine without aura and tension-type headache. Diagnostic blockade of greater occipital and supra-orbital nerves

Gunnar Bovim; Trond Sand

&NA; The diagnostic value of greater occipital and supra‐orbital nerve blockades in patients with cervicogenic headache, migraine without aura, and tension‐type headache was investigated. The pain reduction after greater occipital nerve blockade was significantly more marked in the cervicogenic headache group than in the other categories. Moreover, pain reduction in the forehead was generally only found in the cervicogenic headache patients (77%). Pain reduction (in %) was significantly more marked following the greater occipital than the supra‐orbital nerve blockade. The volume effect per se was evaluated by saline injection. This procedure did not result in distinct pain reduction. The effect obtained in cervicogenic headache is, accordingly, probably due to the local anaesthesia. The present results support the postulate that different pathogenetic factors probably are responsible for cervicogenic headache, tension‐type headache, and migraine without aura.


European Journal of Neurology | 2004

A controlled prospective inception cohort study on the post‐concussion syndrome outside the medicolegal context

D. Mickevičiene; Harald Schrader; D. Obelieniene; D. Surkiene; R. Kunickas; Lars Jacob Stovner; Trond Sand

In an earlier historical cohort study on the post‐concussion syndrome (PCS) in Lithuania, a country in which there are few confounding factors, the validity of this condition as a disease entity could not be confirmed. In order to register the post‐traumatic symptoms, the influence of sociodemographic factors, and the effect of expectation on these symptoms more reliably, we performed a controlled prospective study. Three hundred subjects with concussion were followed up with repeated questionnaires for 1 year. For each study subject, a sex‐ and age‐matched control person with minor non‐head injury was identified. These controls received similar questionnaires. Headache both after 3 months and after 1 year did not differ significantly between the head‐injured participants and the non‐head‐injured controls. Several other symptoms attributed to PCS did not differ significantly between the groups after 3 months. After 1 year the vast majority of symptoms did not differ significantly. Exceptions were slightly significant differences concerning memory problems, concentration problems, dizziness and tiredness. These differences were insignificant when analysing symptoms in unmarried and/or people with lower education, separately. No relationship between cognitive dysfunction and the severity of concussion was found. Although the possibility of a mild organic brain injury cannot be completely ruled out, our results cast doubt on the validity of PCS as a useful clinical entity, at least for head injuries with loss of consciousness for <15 min. Sociodemographic factors and expectation seem to influence reporting of symptoms after concussion.


Cephalalgia | 2000

Visual, long‐latency auditory and brainstem auditory evoked potentials in migraine: relation to pattern size, stimulus intensity, sound and light discomfort thresholds and pre‐attack state

Trond Sand; J Vanagaite Vingen

We aimed to estimate primary sensory evoked potential (EP) amplitude, amplitude–intensity functions and habituation in migraine patients compared with healthy control subjects and to investigate the possible relation to check size, sound and light discomfort thresholds, and the time to the next attack. Amplitudes of cortical visual evoked potentials (VEP, check size 8′ and 33′), cortical long latency auditory evoked potential (AEP N1P1; 40, 55 and 70 dB SL tones) and brainstem auditory evoked potential (BAEP wave IV–V; 40, 55 and 65 dB SL clicks) were recorded and analysed in a blind and balanced design. The difference between the response to the first and the second half of the stimulus sequence was used as a measure of habituation. Twenty-one migraine patients (16 women and five men, mean age 39.3 years, six with aura, 15 without aura) and 22 sex- and age-matched healthy control subjects were studied (18 women and four men, mean age 39.5 years). Low sound discomfort threshold correlated significantly with low levels of BAEP wave IV–V amplitude habituation (r = –0.30, P = 0.05). VEP and AEP amplitudes, habituation, and amplitude–intensity function (ASF) slopes did not differ between groups when anova main factors were considered. Control group VEP habituation was found for small check stimuli (P = 0.04), while potentiation was observed for medium sized checks (P = 0.02). The eight migraine patients who experienced headache within 24 h after the test tended to have increased BAEP wave IV–V ASF slopes (P = 0.08). This subgroup did also have a significant VEP habituation to small checks (P = 0.04). No correlation was found between different modalities. These results suggest that: (i) VEP habituation/potentiation state and brainstem activation state may depend on the attack–interval cycle in migraine; (ii) VEP habituation/potentiation may depend on spatial stimulus frequency; (iii) phonophobia (and possibly photophobia) may depend more on subcortical (brainstem) function than on cortical mechanisms; (iv) low cortical preactivation in migraine could not be confirmed; (v) EP habituation and ASF analysis may reflect sensory modality-specific, not generalized, central nervous system states in migraine and healthy control subjects.

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