Anders Nikolai Åsberg
Norwegian University of Science and Technology
7 Papers
3 Citations
Anders Nikolai Åsberg is an academic researcher from Norwegian University of Science and Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Migraine. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 7 publications.
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Papers
The Mortality Associated With Chronic Widespread Musculoskeletal Complaints: A Systematic Review of the Literature.
TL;DR: Combined data gave no evidence of a higher mortality rate among individuals with chronic widespread musculoskeletal complaints, and the non-significant tendency for higher mortality rates in those with CWMSC was nearly eliminated in unadjusted pooled analyses.
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Do incident musculoskeletal complaints influence mortality? The Nord-Trøndelag Health study.
Anders Nikolai Åsberg,Knut Hagen,Lars Jacob Stovner,Ingrid Heuch,John-Anker Zwart,Bendik S. Winsvold +5 more
TL;DR: Investigation of the association between MSC onset within the last month and mortality found no clear association between the number of MSC body sites and mortality, and Incident MSC were not associated with an increased mortality, neither for all-cause mortality, nor cause-specific mortality.
The HUNT4 study: the validity of questionnaire-based diagnoses.
Knut Hagen,Anders Nikolai Åsberg,Benjamin Langsæter Uhlig,Erling Tronvik,Eiliv Brenner,Trond Sand +5 more
TL;DR: The HUNT4 questionnaire is a valid tool for identifying persons with lifetime migraine, self-reported active migraine and active migraine applying liberal modified criteria.
The epidemiology of headache disorders: a face-to-face interview of participants in HUNT4
Knut Hagen,Anders Nikolai Åsberg,Benjamin Langsæter Uhlig,Erling Tronvik,Eiliv Brenner,Marit Stjern,Grethe Helde,Gøril Bruvik Gravdahl,Trond Sand +8 more
TL;DR: In this population-based cross-sectional headache study performed by a face-to-face interview, the 1-year prevalence of TTH was 43.1% and of idiopathic stabbing headache 34.1%, whereas the lifetime prevalence of migraine was 32.8%.
Migraine as a predictor of mortality: The HUNT study.
Anders Nikolai Åsberg,Lars Jacob Stovner,John-Anker Zwart,John-Anker Zwart,Bendik S. Winsvold,Bendik S. Winsvold,Ingrid Heuch,Knut Hagen +7 more
TL;DR: There was no difference in all-cause mortality between individuals with migraine and non-migrainous headache compared to those without headache or between headache status and mortality by cardiovascular disease.