Cephalalgia : an international journal of headache
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A possible relation between migraine and epilepsy has been a matter of debate for many decades. Clinical, epidemiological and therapeutic similarities may be coincidental and are no proof of a common aetiological background. However, a genetically determined dysfunction of ion channels seems to point to a common underlying mechanism for both paroxysmal disorders. ⋯ It is likely that the development of specific drugs aimed at restoring ion-channel function and/or related cellular signalling pathways might benefit patients with epilepsy as well as those with migraine. This review will briefly summarize the clinical, epidemiological, pathophysiological and therapeutic similarities between migraine and epilepsy. Most attention will be paid to the genetic relationship between these two paroxysmal disorders.
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This prospective, open-label study aimed to evaluate the efficacy of pregabalin treatment in patients suffering from trigeminal neuralgia with and without concomitant facial pain. Fifty-three patients with trigeminal neuralgia (14 with concomitant chronic facial pain) received pregabalin (PGB) 150-600 mg daily and were prospectively followed for 1 year. The primary outcome was number of patients pain free or with reduction of pain intensity by > 50% and of attack frequency by > 50% after 8 weeks. ⋯ Patients without concomitant facial pain showed better response rates (32 of 39, 82%) compared with patients with concomitant chronic facial pain (7 of 14, 50%, P = 0.020). Concomitant chronic facial pain appears to be a clinical predictor of poor treatment outcome. PGB appears to be effective in the treatment of trigeminal neuralgia.
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The pathophysiology of primary exertional headache (EH) is unknown. Physical exertion is associated with Valsalva-like manoeuvres (VM). VM leads to increased intrathoracic pressure and reduces cerebral venous drainage. ⋯ Seventy percent of EH patients and 20% of controls demonstrated IJVVI, yielding a significant difference (P = 0.0004). IJVVI was always observed on the dominant venous drainage side. Our study suggests that intracranial venous congestion caused by retrograde jugular venous flow might play a role in the pathophysiology of EH with IJVVI as a risk factor.
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Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) and substance P (SP) play an important role in the development of pain and hyperalgesia. Experimental models have demonstrated that nitroglycerin (NTG)--a nitric oxide donor--provokes a hyperalgesic state, probably via the activation of second-order neurons in the nucleus trigeminalis caudalis. In order to gain further insight into the role of CGRP and SP in different types of experimental pain, we evaluated and compared changes in immunoreactivity (-ir) for these two neuropeptides at different levels of the central nervous system [nucleus trigeminalis caudalis (NTC) and dorsal horns of the lumbar spinal cord] in two animal models of hyperalgesia: systemic NTG administration and formalin test. ⋯ The changes in the staining intensities were paralleled by changes in the numbers of CGRP and of SP varicosities in both the NTC and the lumbar dorsal horns. These findings show specific changes in CGRP and SP at different levels of the central nervous system in the different models of pain. In the case of the formalin test, the changes involve both neuropeptides synchronously and to the same extent, whereas in the case of NTG administration, CGRP seems to play a more prevalent and long-lasting role, particularly at the NTC level.