Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Tenderness and pain thresholds in pericranial muscles were studied in a random sample of 735 adults aged 25-64 years. This study was a part of a multifaceted, epidemiological study of different headache disorders. Manual palpation and pressure pain threshold were performed by observers blinded to the persons' history of headache. The aim of the study was to evaluate the possible role of pericranial myofascial nociception in headache pathogenesis. Tenderness in migraineurs did not differ from non-migraineurs. Subjects with episodic tension-type headache and females with chronic tension-type headache were more tender than the rest of the population, and males without any experience of headache were less tender than the rest of the male population. A strong positive correlation between tenderness and frequency of tension-type headache was found (males: P < 10(-4); females: P < 10(-5)), while no relation between tenderness and migraine frequency was seen (P = 0.43). In subjects having actual headache at the day of examination tenderness was 32% increased compared to a matched group with identical usual frequency of headache, but without headache during the examination. A significant relation of tenderness to the recency of last episode of headache was detected in both sexes after control for usual frequency and actual headache (males: P < 10(-3); females: P < 10(-4)). Pressure pain thresholds were largely normal indicating normal pain processing and contradicting the idea that tension-type headache mainly is due to generally increased pain sensitivity. This study supports the pathogenetic importance of muscular factors in tension-type headache, while muscular factors are of no primary importance in migraine.
...
PMID:Muscle tenderness and pressure pain thresholds in headache. A population study. 845 67

The aim of the present study was to investigate the stimulus-response function for pressure versus pain in patients with myofascial pain. Forty patients with chronic tension-type headache and 40 healthy controls were examined. Tenderness in 8 pericranial muscles and tendon insertions was evaluated by manual palpation with a standardized evaluated methodology. Thereafter, a highly tender muscle and a largely normal muscle were palpated with 7 different pressure intensities using a palpometer, and the induced pain was recorded by the subjects on a visual analogue scale blinded for the observer. Pericranial myofascial tenderness was considerably higher in patients than in controls (P < 0.00001). The stimulus-response function recorded from normal muscle was well described by a power function. From highly tender muscle, the stimulus-response function was displaced towards lower pressures and, more importantly, it was linear, i.e., qualitatively different from normal muscle. Our results demonstrate for the first time that nociceptive processes are qualitatively altered in patients with chronic myofascial pain and suggest that myofascial pain may be mediated by low-threshold mechanosensitive afferents projecting to sensitized dorsal horn neurons. Further investigations of these mechanisms may lead to an increased understanding and better treatment of these common and often incapacitation pain disorders.
...
PMID:Qualitatively altered nociception in chronic myofascial pain. 882 15

The aim of this study was to assess the immunogenicity and reactogenicity of a combined vaccine against hepatitis A virus (HAV) and hepatitis B virus (HBV) in young healthy adults. A total of 150 subjects (20 +/- 1.4 years; 111 females and 39 males) negative for anti-HAV, anti-HBs, anti-HBc and HBsAg markers, were enrolled and randomized to received the study vaccine from one of the three lots under double blind conditions. Three doses of the combined vaccine were administered by intramuscular route (deltoid) following a 0-, 1- and 6 months schedule. Each dose of 1 ml contained at least 720 ELISA Units of HAV antigen (Strain HM175) and 20 micrograms of recombinant HBsAg. Blood samples for anti-HAV (ELISA), anti-HBs (RIA) and transaminases determinations were obtained 1 month after the administration of each dose and before to the administration of the third dose (month 6). Local and general reactions were recorded by the vaccinee on the day of each vaccination and for the three following days on symptom sheets. A total of 147 subjects completed the study. There were not statistically significant differences between groups regarding to immunogenicity. All subjects had seroconverted [geometric mean titres (GMT): 1311 mIU ml-1] for hepatitis A component following the second dose; GMT increased to 8895 mIU ml-1 after the third dose. Seroconversion rates for hepatitis B component were 98% (GMT, 104 mIU ml-1) after the second dose and 100% after the third dose (GMT, 7097 mIU ml-1). There were not statistically significant differences between groups regarding to incidence of local and general symptoms. Soreness at the injection site and headache were the most commonly local and general symptoms reported, following 42% and 11% of the doses, respectively. This vaccine when given to young adults was well tolerated and induced high immunogenic response, similar to that obtained by hepatitis A and hepatitis B vaccines administered separately in previously reported trials.
...
PMID:Immunogenicity and reactogenicity of a combined hepatitis A and B vaccine in young adults. 899 14

Skin roll tests were performed on 15 patients with cervicogenic headache, 15 with tension headache ("tension-type headache"; 6 with the acute ("episodic") and 9 with the chronic form), and 43 migraine without aura patients (15 without and 28 with sideshift). Three positions (trapezius, mandibular, supraorbital) were used. The results were compared with those obtained in a control series (no. = 95). Fourteen cervicogenic (93.3%), 8 tension headache (53.3%), and 8 migraine (18.6%) patients reported tenderness in the trapezius position during the procedure. Tenderness asymmetry of > or = 10 mm on the visual analogue scale (with the highest value on the symptomatic side; trapezius position) was found in 10 (67%) cervicogenic headache patients, vs 3 (20%) tension headache patients and no migraine patients. A clear tenderness asymmetry in this area may suggest a cervicogenic headache rather than a migraine without aura diagnosis. Thickness values were less helpful in distinguishing cervicogenic headache from other headaches. In the cervicogenic headache group, both tenderness and skinfold thickness showed significantly higher values on the symptomatic than on the non symptomatic side in the trapezius position, but not in the other positions. The differences between cervicogenic headache on the one hand and tension headache/migraine on the other were generally rather small, indeed, there was a considerable overlap between the groups. In single cases, therefore, the skin roll test will contribute little to the differential diagnosis of cervicogenic headache.
...
PMID:The "skin roll" test: a diagnostic test for cervicogenic headache? 962 97

In a phase I safety and immunogenicity study, 112 healthy adult volunteers were randomly allocated to receive a new bivalent (A/Texas/36/91[H1N1-like], B/Harbin/7/94) split virion influenza vaccine propagated in Madin-Darby Canine Kidney cell culture or an identical vaccine manufactured using currently licensed egg propagated virus technology. Soreness at the injection site was common but generally mild (75% of the cell culture-derived vaccine group and 62.5% of the egg-derived vaccine group; p = not significant). General reactions were less common; headache was the most frequently reported adverse effect (26.8 and 30.4%, respectively; p = not significant). Geometric mean haemagglutination inhibition titres post-immunization against the A/Texas strain were 1012 reciprocal dilution in the cell culture-derived vaccine group and 790 in the egg-derived vaccine group; against the B/Harbin strain titres were 420 and 447, respectively (all comparisons, p = not significant). It is concluded that the cell culture-derived split virion influenza vaccine is safe and immunogenic in healthy adult volunteers.
...
PMID:Safety and immunogenicity of a new influenza vaccine grown in mammalian cell culture. 968 98

In this present thesis I have discussed the epidemiology and possible pathophysiological mechanisms of tension-type headache. A population-based study of 1000 subjects randomly selected from a general population, two clinical studies, and a method study of EMG recordings, were conducted. Tension-type headache was the most prevalent form of headache, with a life-time prevalence of 78% in a general adult population. Thirty percent were affected more than 14 days per year and 3% were chronically affected, i.e. had headache at least every other day. Females were more frequently affected than males, and young subjects more frequently affected than older subjects. Females were more sensitive to mechanical pressure pain and revealed more tenderness from pericranial muscles and tendon insertions than males, and young subjects were more pain-sensitive than older subjects. Significantly higher tenderness in pericranial muscles was found in subjects with tension-type headache compared to migraineurs and to subjects without any experience of headache. Tenderness increased significantly with increasing frequency of tension-type headache in both males and females, whereas no such relation was found for mechanical pain thresholds. The applied EMG methodology was fairly reliable and nonpainful, but due to intersubject variability paired studies should be preferred. Subjects with chronic tension-type headache had slightly increased EMG levels during resting conditions and decreased levels during maximal voluntary contraction compared with headache-free subjects, indicating insufficient relaxation at rest and impaired recruitment at maximal activity. In a subsequent clinical, controlled study, the effect of 30 min of sustained tooth clenching was studied. Within 24 h, 69% of patients and 17% of controls developed a tension-type headache. Shortly after clenching, tenderness was increased in the group who subsequently developed headache, whereas tenderness was stable in the group of patients who remained headache-free, indicating that tenderness might be a causative factor of the headache. Likewise, psychophysical and EMG parameters were studied in 28 patients with tension-type headache, both during and outside of a spontaneous episode of tension-type headache. It was concluded that a peripheral mechanism of tension-type headache is most likely in the episodic subform, whereas a secondary, segmental central sensitization and/or an impaired supraspinal modulation of incoming stimuli seems to be involved in subjects with chronic tension-type headache. Prolonged nociceptive stimuli from myofascial tissue may be of importance for the conversion of episodic into chronic tension-type headache. The author emphasizes that tension-type headache is a multifactorial disorder with several concurrent pathophysiological mechanisms, and that extracranial myofascial nociception may constitute only one of them. The present thesis supplements the understanding of the balance between peripheral and central components in tension-type headache, and thereby, hopefully, leads us to a better prevention and treatment of the most prevalent type of headache.
Cephalalgia 1999 Jul
PMID:Pathophysiological mechanisms of tension-type headache: a review of epidemiological and experimental studies. 1044 49

The aim of the present thesis was to investigate the pathophysiology of chronic tension-type headache with special reference to central mechanisms. Increased tenderness to palpation of pericranial myofascial tissues is the most apparent abnormality in patients with tension-type headache. A new piece of equipment, a so-called palpometer, that makes it possible to control the pressure intensity exerted during palpation, was developed. Thereafter, it was demonstrated that the measurement of tenderness could be compared between two observers if the palpation pressure was controlled, and that the Total Tenderness Scoring system was well suited for the scoring of tenderness during manual palpation. Subsequently, it was found that pressure pain detection and tolerance thresholds were significantly decreased in the finger and tended to be decreased in the temporal region in chronic tension-type headache patients compared with controls. In addition, the electrical pain threshold in the cephalic region was significantly decreased in patients. It was concluded that the central pain sensitivity was increased in the patients probably due to sensitization of supraspinal neurones. The stimulus-response function for palpation pressure vs. pain was found to be qualitatively altered in chronic tension-type headache patients compared with controls. The abnormality was related to the degree of tenderness and not to the diagnosis of tension-type headache. In support of this, the stimulus-response function was found to be qualitatively altered also in patients with fibromyalgia. It was concluded that the qualitatively altered nociception was probably due to central sensitization at the level of the spinal dorsal horn/trigeminal nucleus. Thereafter, the prophylactic effect of amitriptyline, a non-selective serotonin (5-HT) reuptake inhibitor, and of citalopram, a highly selective 5-HT reuptake inhibitor, was examined in patients with chronic tension-type headache. Amitriptyline reduced headache significantly more than placebo, while citalopram had only a slight and insignificant effect. It was concluded that the blockade of 5-HT reuptake could only partly explain the efficacy of amitriptyline in tension-type headache, and that also other actions of amitriptyline, e.g. reduction of central sensitization, were involved. Finally, the plasma 5-HT level, the platelet 5-HT level and the number of platelet 5-HT transporters were found to be normal in chronic tension-type headache. On the basis of the present and previous studies, a pathophysiological model for tension-type headache is presented. According to the model, the main problem in chronic tension-type headache is central sensitization at the level of the spinal dorsal horn/trigeminal nucleus due to prolonged nociceptive inputs from pericranial myofascial tissues. The increased nociceptive input to supraspinal structures may in turn result in supraspinal sensitization. The central neuroplastic changes may affect the regulation of peripheral mechanisms and thereby lead to, for example, increased pericranial muscle activity or release of neurotransmitters in the myofascial tissues. By such mechanisms the central sensitization may be maintained even after the initial eliciting factors have been normalized, resulting in the conversion of episodic into chronic tension-type headache. Future basic and clinical research should aim at identifying the source of peripheral nociception in order to prevent the development of central sensitization and at ways of reducing established sensitization. This may lead to a much needed improvement in the treatment of chronic tension-type headache and other chronic myofascial pain conditions.
Cephalalgia 2000 Jun
PMID:Central sensitization in tension-type headache--possible pathophysiological mechanisms. 1103 46

Migraine pathophysiology is associated with a dural inflammation. Recent evidence suggests that the primary inflammation occurs in a maxillary nerve segment, accessible intraorally. Local tenderness, related to symptom laterality, has been palpated consistently in asymptomatic migraine patients, and significant migraine relief has been obtained from chilling confined to this area. Thirty-five symptomatic episodic migraine patients were enrolled in this study, comparing 40 minutes of bilateral intraoral chilling, 50 mg of oral sumatriptan, and 40 minutes of sham (tongue) chilling. Hollow metal tubes chilled by circulating ice water were held in the maxillary molar periapical areas by the patient. Pain and nausea were recorded at baseline and 1, 2, 4, and 24 hours after start of treatment, using a numeric symptom-relief scale. Significant mean headache relief was obtained by maxillary chilling and sumatriptan at all four time intervals, with poor relief obtained by placebo. Maxillary chilling was more effective than sumatriptan at all four time intervals. Significant nausea relief was obtained by maxillary chilling and sumatriptan at posttreatment and 2 and 4 hours later. At 24 hours, some headache and nausea recurrence was noted with sumatriptan. The repeated-measures analysis of variance indicated that both treatments, drug (P = 0.024) and maxillary chilling (P = 0.001), reduced the headache, as compared with the control group. Tenderness suggests local inflammation associated with vasodilatation and edema. Because chilling can resolve local edema, these findings raise the possibility that an intraoral inflammation may be a factor in migraine etiology.
...
PMID:Intraoral chilling versus oral sumatriptan for acute migraine. 1197 19

Tenderness is the most prominent abnormal finding in patients with tension-type headache (TTH). Recently we developed a model of myofascial tenderness using intramuscular infusion of a combination of bradykinin, serotonin, histamine and prostaglandin E2. We aimed to examine tenderness after this combination in patients with episodic TTH (ETTH). Fifteen patients and 15 healthy controls completed the study. Participants received the combination into the non-dominant trapezius muscle in a randomized, double-blinded and placebo-controlled design. Local tenderness and stimulus-response functions, mechanical pain thresholds (PPDT) in the temporal region and on the finger, and total tenderness score (TTS) were recorded. A local, prolonged, and mild to moderate tenderness was reported both in patients (P = 0.001) and in controls (P = 0.001) after the combination compared with the placebo. The response to the combination tended to be increased in patients. The stimulus-response function was leftward shifted after the combination, compared with baseline in both groups. No changes in PPDT or TTS were found after the infusions, whereas baseline PPDTs were decreased in ETTH compared with controls (PPDTfinger: P = 0.033; PPDTtemporal: P = 0.015). Intramuscular infusion of a combination of endogenous substances induced prolonged tenderness in both patients with episodic TTH and healthy subjects. The present results suggest an increased excitability of peripheral muscle afferents in TTH.
...
PMID:Induction of prolonged tenderness in patients with tension-type headache by means of a new experimental model of myofascial pain. 1275 98

Current opinion concerning the pathophysiology of tension-type headache (TTH) and its related pericranial muscle tenderness proposes a primary role of central sensitization at the level of dorsalhorn/trigeminal nucleus as well as the supraspinal level. Investigation of these phenomena can be conducted using laser-evoked potentials (LEPs), which are objective and quantitative neurophysiological tools for the assessment of pain perception. In the present study we examined features of LEPs, as well as cutaneous heat-pain thresholds to laser stimulation, in relation to the tenderness of pericranial muscles in chronic TTH resulting from pericranial muscle disorder, during a pain-free phase. Twelve patients with TTH and 11 healthy controls were examined using the Total Tenderness Scoring (TTS) system. The stimulus was a laser pulse generated by a CO(2) laser. The dorsum of the hand and the cutaneous zones corresponding to pericranial muscles were stimulated. Subjective perception of stimulus intensity was assessed by a visual analogue scale. Two responses, the earlier named N2a and the last named P2, were considered; the absolute latency was measured at the highest peak of each response. The N2a-P2 components' peak-to-peak amplitude was detected. The heat pain threshold was similar in TTH patients and controls at the level of both the hand and pericranial skin. The TTS scores at almost all pericranial sites were higher in TTH patients than in normal controls. The amplitude of the N2a-P2 complex elicited by stimulation of the pericranial zone was greater in TTH patients than in controls; the amplitude increase was significantly associated with the TTS score. Our findings suggest that pericranial tenderness may be a primary phenomenon that precedes headache, and is mediated by a greater pain-specific hypervigilance at the cortical level.
...
PMID:Heat pain thresholds and cerebral event-related potentials following painful CO2 laser stimulation in chronic tension-type headache. 1285 20


<< Previous 1 2 3 Next >>