Multiple studies have found that obesity increases the risk of:
Chronic daily headaches
Migraine frequency and severity
Transformation from episodic to chronic migraine
More disabling headaches
There appears to be a relationship between BMI and headache frequency – higher BMI correlates with more frequent headaches, especially in younger adults and women.
Several factors may explain this connection: Inflammatory mediators-Adipose tissue produces pro-inflammatory cytokines (like TNF-alpha, IL-6) that may lower the headache threshold.
Adipokines-Hormones from fat tissue, leptin, adiponectin, may influence pain pathways
Comorbid conditions:
Obesity is associated with sleep apnea, hypertension, and metabolic syndrome all linked to headaches
Shared pathophysiology-Both obesity and migraine may involve hypothalamic dysfunction and inflammation
Weight loss has been shown to reduce headache frequency and severity in obese patients with migraine
Even modest weight reduction (5-10% of body weight) may provide benefit.
BMI should be considered when evaluating chronic headache patients
