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      Persistent medication-induced neural adaptations, descending facilitation, and medication overuse headache

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          Abstract

          Purpose of review

          An impediment to the investigation of mechanisms that drive headache is the inability of preclinical models to measure headache. Migraine attacks are associated with the development of cutaneous allodynia in some patients. Such cutaneous allodynia suggests a state of ‘central sensitization’ of pain transmission pathways and may additionally reflect the engagement of descending facilitation from pain modulatory circuits. For this reason, cutaneous allodynia has been measured in animal models as a surrogate of marker that may be relevant to headache. Overuse of antimigraine medications can promote an increase in the frequency and intensity of headache, a syndrome termed medication overuse headache (MOH). The mechanisms leading to MOH are not known, but may involve the processes of amplification including central sensitization and descending facilitation. This review explores potential mechanistic insights that have emerged from such studies and that could contribute to MOH.

          Recent findings

          Development of MOH has been recently associated with long-lasting adaptive changes that occur within the peripheral and central nervous systems. Preclinical studies have shown that repeated or continuous treatment with antimigraine drugs result in persistent upregulation of neurotransmitters within the orofacial division of the trigeminal ganglia and in development of cutaneous allodynia in response to migraine triggers, even weeks after discontinuation of the antimigraine drug. Additionally, descending facilitation is critical for the expression of cutaneous allodynia and may mask the expression of diffuse noxious inhibitory controls.

          Summary

          Medication-induced persistent pronociceptive adaptations might be responsible for lowering the threshold and amplifying the response to migraine triggers leading to increased frequency of headache attacks.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          9319162
          2572
          Curr Opin Neurol
          Curr. Opin. Neurol.
          Current opinion in neurology
          1350-7540
          1473-6551
          9 November 2017
          June 2011
          16 November 2017
          : 24
          : 3
          : 193-196
          Affiliations
          Department of Pharmacology, College of Medicine, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA
          Author notes
          Correspondence to Milena De Felice, PhD, Department of Pharmacology, College of Medicine, 1501 North Campbell, Tucson, AZ 85724-5050, USA, Tel: +1 520 626 4281; fax: +1 520 626 2204; defelice@ 123456email.arizona.edu
          Article
          PMC5690482 PMC5690482 5690482 nihpa919006
          10.1097/WCO.0b013e328346af25
          5690482
          21467931
          42f96ae4-d168-4c1f-b17b-baa925b00018
          History
          Categories
          Article

          descending facilitation,medication overuse headache,migraine,triptans,cutaneous allodynia

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