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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In vivo imaging of neuroreceptor ligand binding in the human brain is a young discipline. In migraine patients only few studies on
dopamine D2 receptor
binding have been reported. Many potentially useful radiolabeled receptor ligands for SPECT investigations in humans are currently being treated in animal models. There are no reports on development of radiolabeled, specific 5HT1D receptor ligands, which would be of considerable interest in studies of migraine patients. The radiochemistry of receptor ligand development for SPECT is complex and expensive. However, once a suitable radiolabeled ligand has been developed, e.g. labeled with I-123 with a fairly long decay ratio, it can be made widely accessible to nuclear medical units. SPECT might even prove to be as powerful a tool as PET for quantification of neuroreceptor binding profiles. Quantification, though, is not a trivial problem and there is still a need for development of kinetic models that can be applied in the clinical setting, particularly for studies of acute conditions like a migraine attack.
Cephalalgia
1995
PMID:In vivo neuroreceptor imaging by SPECT in migraine. 758 29
Cabergoline is a synthetic ergoline which shows high specificity and affinity for the
dopamine D2 receptor
. It is a potent and very long-acting inhibitor of prolactin secretion. Prolactin-lowering effects occur rapidly and, after a single dose, were evident at the end of follow up (21 days) in puerperal women, and up to 14 days in patients with hyperprolactinaemia. In the only comparative study to date, cabergoline 0.5 to 1.0 mg twice weekly was more effective than bromocriptine 2.5 to 5.0 mg twice daily in the treatment of hyperprolactinaemic amenorrhoea, restoring ovulatory cycles in 72% of women and normalising plasma prolactin levels in 83%, compared with 52 and 58%, respectively, for bromocriptine. In the prevention of puerperal lactation, a single dose of cabergoline 1.0mg was as effective as bromocriptine 2.5mg twice daily for 14 days. A significantly lower incidence of rebound lactation in the third postpartum week was seen with cabergoline. Unpublished data suggest cabergoline 0.25mg twice daily for 2 days is effective in suppressing established puerperal lactation in about 85% of women. Nausea, vomiting,
headache
and dizziness are characteristic adverse events of the dopaminergic ergot derivatives. Cabergoline appears to be better tolerated than bromocriptine in both patients with hyperprolactinaemia and postpartum women. Most patients intolerant of other ergot derivatives can tolerate cabergoline. Bromocriptine use in the puerperium has been associated with an increased risk of serious thromboembolic events. However, there are no such reports with cabergoline and whether these events will become associated with other dopaminergic agents is unknown. The teratogenic potential of cabergoline has not been extensively investigated in humans. Ten congenital abnormalities have been reported in 199 cabergoline-associated pregnancies. Although there is no pattern to these abnormalities, the limited experience with cabergoline in pregnancy means the drug cannot be considered as a first-line therapy for the treatment of infertility associated with hyperprolactinaemia. At this stage of its development, cabergoline will prove useful in patients with hyperprolactinaemia who have failed treatment with, or are intolerant of, other dopamine agonists such as bromocriptine. If drug treatment is required for the prevention or suppression of puerperal lactation, cabergoline offers significant advantages over bromocriptine and should become the drug treatment of first choice for this indication.
...
PMID:Cabergoline. A review of its pharmacological properties and therapeutic potential in the treatment of hyperprolactinaemia and inhibition of lactation. 772 32
We studied in vivo the influence of flunarizine on dopamine D2 receptors and investigated whether
dopamine D2 receptor
blockade is involved in its antimigraine action. Eleven migraine patients, treated with flunarizine, 10 mg per day, underwent single photon emission computer tomography (SPECT) using [123I] labeled iodobenzamide, a ligand with high affinity and high specificity for D2 receptors. There was a reduction of the
dopamine D2 receptor
binding potential in all patients compared to age-matched controls. The efficacy of flunarizine in migraine prophylaxis failed to correlate with the degree of the
dopamine D2 receptor
blockade. The antimigraine action of flunarizine may not involve antidopaminergic mechanisms.
Cephalalgia
1994 Jun
PMID:Dopamine D2 receptor blockade and antimigraine action of flunarizine. 795 46
The dopamine theory of migraine pathogenesis, first proposed by F. Sicuteri in 1977, has attracted renewed interest after an increased frequency of the
dopamine D2 receptor
(DRD2) gene allele NcoI C was found in patients with migraine with aura. Therefore we reviewed the relevant literature. The most compelling argument favoring an interictal hypersensitivity of dopamine receptors in migraineurs stems from pharmacologic studies of the gastric and autonomic effects of dopaminergic agents such as apomorphine, but none of these studies was blinded and placebo-controlled. Various DRD2 antagonists abort migraine attacks after parenteral administration, while there is circumstantial evidence that dopamine agonists may be useful for prophylaxis. Most drugs used in these trials, however, lack selectivity for dopamine receptors. Both in pharmacological and therapeutic studies most patients had migraine without aura. We conclude that data suggesting a primary role for the dopaminergic system in migraine pathogenesis are unconvincing. Based on well established interactions between central amines, a reduced release of serotonin between attacks could lower dopamine release which would lead to receptor hypersensitivity.
Cephalalgia
1998 May
PMID:Dopamine and migraine: a review of pharmacological, biochemical, neurophysiological, and therapeutic data. 1153 7
This article reviews the pathophysiology and pharmacology of emesis in relation to migraine pathogenesis. Also, the place of antiemetic and gastrointestinal prokinetic agents in current and future acute migraine treatment strategies is reviewed. The mechanisms of action of current and novel acute migraine therapies are considered with respect to the neurogenic and vascular hypothesis. Control of migraine-associated nausea and vomiting is often achieved with the benzamide
dopamine D2 receptor
antagonist metoclopramide. This drug also has 5HT3 receptor antagonist activity and reproducibly stimulates gastric motility to increase the availability of orally administered drugs. Other antiemetic and gastroprokinetic agents with potential value for the treatment of migraine-associated nausea and vomiting could speed absorption of oral antimigraine therapies without central nervous system side effects. Domperidone, a
dopamine D2 receptor
antagonist that does not cross the blood brain barrier is relatively free of the central side-effect liability of metoclopramide. Cisapride, a benzamide 5HT4 receptor agonist gastrointestinal prokinetic drug, lacks dopamine antagonist activity. A controlled comparison of these agents as migraine co-therapies could provide information on the importance of peripheral and central mechanisms in migraine-associated nausea and vomiting and improve antimigraine treatment options.
Cephalalgia
1998 Nov
PMID:Pathophysiology and pharmacology of migraine. Is there a place for antiemetics in future treatment strategies? 987 82
Adrogolide (ABT-431; DAS-431) is a chemically stable prodrug that is converted rapidly (<1 min) in plasma to A-86929, a full agonist at dopamine D1 receptors. In in vitro functional assays, A-86929 is over 400 times more selective for dopamine D1 than D2 receptors. In rats with a unilateral loss of striatal dopamine, A-86929 produces contralateral rotations that are inhibited by dopamine D1 but not by
dopamine D2 receptor
antagonists. Adrogolide improves behavioral disability and locomotor activity scores in MPTP-lesioned marmosets, a model of Parkinson's disease (PD), and shows no tolerance upon repeated dosing for 28 days. In PD patients, intravenous (i.v.) adrogolide has antiparkinson efficacy equivalent to that of L-DOPA with a tendency towards a reduced liability to induce dyskinesia. The adverse events associated with its use were of mild-to-moderate severity and included injection site reaction, asthenia,
headache
, nausea, vomiting, postural hypotension, vasodilitation, and dizziness. Adrogolide can also attenuate the ability of cocaine to induce cocaine-seeking behavior and does not itself induce cocaine-seeking behavior in a rodent model of cocaine craving and relapse. In human cocaine abusers, i.v. adrogolide reduces cocaine craving and other cocaine-induced subjective effects. The results of animal abuse liability studies indicate that adrogolide is unlikely to have abuse potential in man. Adrogolide has also been reported to reverse haloperidol-induced cognitive deficits in monkeys, suggesting that it may be an effective treatment for the cognitive dysfunction associated with aging and disease. Adrogolide undergoes a high hepatic "first-pass" metabolism in man after oral dosing and, as a result, has a low oral bioavailability (approximately 4%). This limitation may potentially be circumvented by oral inhalation formulations for intrapulmonary delivery that greatly increase the bioavailability of adrogolide. As the first full dopamine D1 receptor agonist to show efficacy in PD patients and to reduce the craving and subjective effects of cocaine in cocaine abusers, adrogolide represents an important tool in understanding the pharmacotherapeutic potential of dopamine D1 receptor agonists.
...
PMID:Adrogolide HCl (ABT-431; DAS-431), a prodrug of the dopamine D1 receptor agonist, A-86929: preclinical pharmacology and clinical data. 1160 45
1. The location and distribution of dopaminergic receptors in rat dura mater was studied by examining several dural zones (vascular, perivascular, intervascular) in different cranial and spinal regions. 2. The pharmacological characteristics and anatomical distribution of dopamine D1- and D2-like receptors sites were investigated using combined pharmacological techniques and immunofluorescent microscopy. 3. Samples of rat dura mater were obtained from 10 adult Wistar rats. On frozen slices, dopaminergic D1 and D2 receptors were stained immunohistochemically using monoclonal antibodies. 4. Inhibition studies were performed using fluorescent and non-fluorescent agonists or antagonists to define the pharmacological specificity of the immunostaining. 5. The greater sensitivity to displacement by amisulpride, bromocryptine, domperidone, haloperidol, raclopride and l-sulpiride than to displacement by N-propyl-nor-apomorphine, quinpirole and clozapine suggests that the immunofluorescent sites observed in these experiments are likely to belong to the
dopamine D2 receptor
subtype. 6. Our observations provide evidence of the presence of D1 and D2 receptors in the wall of meningeal vessels. The dopaminergic receptors are located in the adventitia, media and intima of dural arteries. Furthermore, the density of receptors is higher in close proximity to arteries and decreases passing from the vascular to the perivascular and intervascular zones. 7. In the rat dura mater, dopamine regulates the meningeal blood vessels and, through this action, dopamine and its receptors can play an important role in the pathogenesis of
cephalalgia
.
...
PMID:Dopaminergic receptors in rat dura mater: pharmacological characteristics. 1500 64
The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether a particular genotype of the
dopamine D2 receptor
(DRD2) gene would affect the clinical features of migraine. In a group of 118 migraineurs (55 migraine with aura and 63 migraine without aura patients), we tested the association of the biallelic C/T NcoI DRD2 polymorphism with several characteristics of the disease. Genotype and allele frequencies resulted similarly distributed in migraine with aura and migraine without aura patients (chi2 = 1.58, P = 0.45 and chi2 = 0.09, P = 0.77, respectively). The different DRD2 genotypes (C/C, C/T and T/T) had no significant effects on age at onset of migraine, presence of premonitory phenomena, frequency of
headache
attacks, associated symptoms, psychological features and quality of life of our migraine patients. The results of our study do not support a role for the DRD2 gene in modifying the clinical features of migraine.
Cephalalgia
2004 Jun
PMID:Lack of interaction between a polymorphism in the dopamine D2 receptor gene and the clinical features of migraine. 1515 61
Many dopamine antagonists are proven acute migraine treatments. Genetic studies also imply that polymorphisms in dopamine genes (DRD2 receptors) in persons with migraine may create dopamine hypersensitivity. However, treatment is limited by the adverse event profiles of conventional neuroleptics including extrapyramidal symptoms, anticholinergic and antihistaminergic effects, hyperprolactinemia, and prolonged cardiac QT interval. Atypical neuroleptics cause less extrapyramial symptoms and some atypical neuroleptics, including olanzapine and quetiapine, may be beneficial as both acute and preventive migraine treatment. The combination of prochlorperazine, indomethacin, and caffeine is effective in the treatment of the acute migraine attack. The mechanism of action by which neuroleptics relieve
headache
is probably related to
dopamine D2 receptor
antagonist. Other actions via serotonin (5HT) receptor antagonists may also be important, particularly for migraine prevention. Additional studies to clarify the mechanism of action of neuroleptics in migraine could lead to new drugs and better management of migraine.
...
PMID:Neuroleptics and migraine. 2002 39
Aripiprazole, a
dopamine D2 receptor
partial agonist, has been used to treat schizophrenia and might be effective for alcohol dependence and craving. We treated a 53-year-old woman with refractory medication overuse
headache
, which was successfully treated with aripiprazole. Our experience suggests that aripiprazole may be effective for patients with medication overuse
headache
.
...
PMID:Effectiveness of aripiprazole for medication overuse headache: a case report. 2150 37
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