Cephalalgia : an international journal of headache
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Review Case Reports
Chronic migraine and medication overuse headache: clarifying the current International Headache Society classification criteria.
Despite the recent advances in the understanding and classification of the chronic daily headaches, considerable controversy still exists regarding the classification of individual headaches, including chronic migraine (CM) and medication overuse headache (MOH). The original criteria, published in 2004, were difficult to apply to most patients with these disorders and were subsequently revised, resulting in broader clinical applicability. ⋯ We aimed to explain the nature of the controversies surrounding the entities of CM and MOH. A clinical case will be used to illustrate some of the problems faced by clinicians in diagnosing patients with chronic daily headache.
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Fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) is a chronic pain condition of unknown aetiology characterized by diffuse pain and tenderness at tender points. The aim of the study was to assess the prevalence and clinical features of FMS in the different forms of primary headaches, in a tertiary headache centre. Primary headache patients (n = 217) were selected and submitted to the Total Tenderness Score, anxiety and depression scales, Migraine Disability Assessment, allodynia questionnaire, Short Form 36 Health Survey and the Medical Outcomes Study-Sleep Scale. ⋯ Headache frequency, pericranial muscle tenderness, anxiety and sleep inadequacy were especially associated with FMS comorbidity. In the FMS patients, fatigue and pain at tender points were significantly correlated with headache frequency. FMS seems increasingly prevalent with increased headache frequency, for the facilitation of central sensitization phenomena favoured by anxiety and sleep disturbances.
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Comparative Study
Calcitonin gene-related peptide receptor inhibition reduces neuronal activity induced by prolonged increase in nitric oxide in the rat spinal trigeminal nucleus.
Infusion of nitric oxide (NO) donors is known to induce delayed attacks of migraine and cluster headache or aggravate tension-type headaches in patients suffering from these primary headaches. Previously we have reported that infusion of NO donors in the rat causes delayed neuronal activity in the spinal trigeminal nucleus, which parallels the above clinical observations. Suggesting that endogenous NO production is involved in the generation of primary headaches, we used this animal model of meningeal nociception to determine whether a prolonged increase in NO levels causes an increase in neuronal activity. ⋯ In this activated trigeminal system the calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) receptor antagonist BIBN4096BS (900 microg/kg) was infused. Spinal trigeminal activity was significantly reduced within minutes and to a similar extent as previously reported in animals not treated with NO. Slow continuous NO infusion may be a model of the active headache phase, and inhibition of CGRP receptors can reverse the induced neuronal activity.