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Query: UMLS:C0037315 (
sleep apnea
)
8,000
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cluster headache
is described here as having three distinct and contiguous clinical phases. Evidence of the pathophysiological changes associated with each phase is reviewed. The first phase, the cluster period, is characterized by chronobiological aberrations and impaired sympathetic nervous system activity. These changes may result in impaired autoregulatory chemoreceptor activity and susceptibility to attack provocation. An hypothesis that attempts to explain the second phase, cluster attack induction, is reviewed. Evidence for this model suggests that as a result of chemoreceptor dysfunction, a sustained hypoxemic event, as may result from altitude hypoxia,
sleep apnea
, or vasodilators, could provoke the cluster attack. Attack symptoms and signs, which constitute the third phase of cluster headache, are likely the result of parasympathetic and trigeminal nerve stimulation. Specifically, cluster headache pain is likely the consequence of neurovascular inflammation, as hypothesized in the trigeminovascular theory.
...
PMID:The pathogenesis of cluster headache. 808 23
We describe a 49-year-old man with chronic cluster headache unresponsive to all medications. Following investigation in the sleep lab he was found to have obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) with associated oxygen desaturations during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. He awakened during one of these episodes with a typical headache. Treatment with nasal CPAP abolished his OSA and desaturations, and largely abolished his headaches. He then developed central apneas during REM sleep. Further treatment with BiPAP, with a set backup rate, abolished both the apneas and the headaches. We conclude that there may be a link between nocturnal
cluster headaches
and
sleep apnea
.
...
PMID:Nocturnal cluster headache associated with sleep apnea. A case report. 837 90
Noxious stimuli and painful disorders interfere with sleep, but disturbances in sleep also contribute to the experience of pain.Chronic paroxysmal hemicrania and possibly
cluster headaches
are related to REM sleep. Whereas headache is associated with snoring and
sleep apnea
, morning headaches are not specific for any primary sleep disorder. Nevertheless, the management of the sleep disorder ameliorates both morning headache and migraine.Noxious stimuli administered into muscles during slow-wave sleep (SWS) result in decreases in delta and sigma but an increase in alpha and beta EEG frequencies during sleep. Noise stimuli that disrupt SWS result in unrefreshing sleep, diffuse musculoskeletal pain, tenderness, and fatigue in normal healthy subjects. Such symptoms accompany alpha EEG sleep patterns that often occur in patients with fibromyalgia. The alpha EEG patterns include phasic and tonic alpha EEG sleep as well as periodic K alpha EEG sleep or frequent periodic cyclical alternating pattern. Moreover, alpha EEG sleep, as well as sleep-related breathing disorder and periodic limb movement disorder, occur in some patients with fibromyalgia, rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis. Depression and not alpha EEG sleep are features of somatoform pain disorder. Disturbances in sleep, pain behaviour and psychological distress influence return to work in workers who have suffered a soft tissue injury, e.g. low back pain. Patients with irritable bowel disorder have disturbed sleep and have increased REM sleep. In conclusion, there is a reciprocal relationship between sleep quality and pain. The recognition of disturbed or unrefreshing sleep influences the management of painful medical disorders.
...
PMID:Sleep and pain. 1253 Oct 4
Cluster headache
is characterized by unilateral attacks of severe pain accompanied by cranial autonomic features. Apart from these there are also sleep-related complaints and strong chronobiological features. The interaction between sleep and headache is complex at any level and evidence suggests that it may be of critical importance in our understanding of primary headache disorders. In cluster headache several interactions between sleep and the severe pain attacks have already been proposed. Supported by endocrinological and radiological findings as well as the chronobiological features, predominant theories revolve around central pathology of the hypothalamus. We aimed to investigate the clinical presentation of chronobiological features, the presence of concurrent sleep disorders and the relationship with particular sleep phases or phenomena, the possible role of hypocretin as well as the possible involvement of cardiac autonomic control. We conducted a questionnaire survey on 275 cluster headache patients and 145 controls as well an in-patient sleep study including 40 CH-patients and 25 healthy controls. The findings include: A distinct circannual connection between cluster occurrence and the amount of daylight, substantially poorer sleep quality in patients compared to controls which was present not only inside the clusters but also outside, affected REM-sleep in patients without a particular temporal connection to nocturnal attacks, equal prevalence of
sleep apnea
in both patient and control groups, reduced levels of hypocretin-1 in the cerebrospinal fluid of patients and finally a blunted response to the change from supine to tilted position in the head-up tilt table test indicating a weakened sympathoexcitatory or stronger parasympathetic drive. Overall, these findings support a theory of involvement of dysregulation in hypothalamic and brainstem nuclei in cluster headache pathology. Further, it is made plausible that the headache attacks are but one aspect of a more complex syndrome of central dysregulation manifesting as sleep-related complaints, sub-clinical autonomic dysregulation and of course the severe attacks of unilateral headache. Future endeavors should focus on pathological changes which persist in the attack-free periods but also heed the possibility of long-lived, cluster-induced pathology.
...
PMID:Neurobiology and sleep disorders in cluster headache. 2628 64
Cluster headache
is a rare form of headache associated with sleep and even speculated to be a manifestation of a sleep disorder rather than a primary headache.
Cluster headache
exhibits both circadian and circannual rhythmicity. While attacks often occur during sleep, the implication that
cluster headaches
might be involved with rapid eye movement (REM) sleep phases has neither been fully established nor refuted. The regulatory mechanisms governing sleep including hypothalamic activity and the autonomic nervous system response may play a role. Hypothalamic activation has been observed in cluster headache patients during positron emission tomography testing, but only during attacks. While
sleep apnea
is associated with morning headaches in general, the link between sleep-disordered respiration and cluster headache remains elusive. Hypoarousal during sleep and periods of hypoxia are associated with cluster headache, the latter likely involving inflammatory processes rather than apnea. Further study is needed, as
cluster headaches
represent a serious primary cephalgia that is incompletely understood.
...
PMID:Exploring the Connection Between Sleep and Cluster Headache: A Narrative Review. 3238 71