Journal
CEPHALALGIA
Volume 41, Issue 11-12, Pages 1268-1271Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/03331024211017250
Keywords
CGRP; capsaicin; headache; trigemino-autonomic symptoms
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The study found that healthy subjects showed a significant increase in alpha-calcitonin-gene related peptide levels only after injection of capsaicin in the forehead, which suggests that this elevation is not specific to primary headache attacks but may be a non-specific effect of first trigeminal branch stimulation following pain activation.
Background Migraine and trigemino-autonomic cephalalgia attacks are associated with an increase of alpha-calcitonin-gene related peptide levels in the ipsilateral jugular vein. It is however unknown whether trigeminal pain stimulation in healthy subjects without headache disorders also induces increase of calcitonin-gene related peptide levels. Findings We measured alpha-calcitonin-gene related peptide levels in eight healthy subjects after subcutaneous injection of capsaicin in the forehead and in the mandibular region and after injection of sodium chloride in the forehead. We observed a significant increase of alpha-calcitonin-gene related peptide level only after injection of capsaicin in the forehead (i.e. first trigeminal branch). We also observed trigemino-autonomic activation (lacrimation, rhinorrhea etc.) only after injection of capsaicin in the forehead. Conclusion Increase of alpha-calcitonin-gene related peptide levels do not only occur in primary headache attacks but also after experimental trigeminal pain of the first branch. This finding suggests that alpha-calcitonin-gene related peptide elevation is, at least an additional, unspecific effect of first trigeminal branch stimulation following pain activation and not a specific mechanism of idiopathic headache disorders.
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