scholarly journals Author Correction: Maladaptive activation of Nav1.9 channels by nitric oxide causes triptan-induced medication overuse headache

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Caroline Bonnet ◽  
Jizhe Hao ◽  
Nancy Osorio ◽  
Anne Donnet ◽  
Virginie Penalba ◽  
...  
F1000Research ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 237 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cherubino Di Lorenzo ◽  
Gianluca Coppola ◽  
Valeria La Salvia ◽  
Francesco Pierelli

Background: Chronic headache is an incapacitating condition afflicting patients at least for 15 days per month. In the most cases it is developed as a consequence of an excessive use of symptomatic drugs.Case: Here we report the case of a 34 year-old man suffering from chronic headache possibly related to the overuse of naphazoline nitrate nasal decongestant, used to treat a supposed chronic sinusitis. However, the patient did not suffer from sinusitis, but from a medication overuse headache (ICHD-II 8.3; ICD-10 44.41) that appeared to be due to excessive use of naphazoline.Conclusion: The use of naphazoline nitrate may result in an analgesic effect upon first use, through activation of adrenergic and opioidergic systems, followed by a pro-migraine effect via a late induction of an inflammatory cascade, modulated by nitric oxide and arachidonic acid. The observation that naphazoline detoxification relieved the patient’s headache, indicates that prolonged use of naphazoline may cause chronic headaches. Therefore, physicians should ask for details on the use of nasal decongestants in patients complaining of chronic headache, as they could potentially be suffering from a medication-overuse headache.


Cephalalgia ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 40 (9) ◽  
pp. 892-902 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edita Navratilova ◽  
Sasan Behravesh ◽  
Janice Oyarzo ◽  
David W Dodick ◽  
Pradeep Banerjee ◽  
...  

Background Ubrogepant, a small-molecule calcitonin gene-related peptide receptor antagonist, was recently approved as an oral medication for the acute treatment of migraine. This study aimed to determine whether ubrogepant shows efficacy in a preclinical model of migraine-like pain and whether repeated oral administration of ubrogepant induces latent sensitization relevant to medication overuse headache in rats. Methods A “two-hit” priming model of medication overuse headache was used. Female Sprague-Dawley rats received six oral doses of sumatriptan 10 mg/kg over 2 weeks to induce latent sensitization (i.e. “priming”). Cutaneous allodynia was measured periodically over 20 days in the periorbital and hindpaw regions using von Frey filaments. The rats were then subjected to a 1-hour bright light stress challenge on two consecutive days. At the start of the second bright light stress exposure, oral sumatriptan 10 mg/kg, oral ubrogepant 25, 50, or 100 mg/kg, or vehicle was administered; thereafter, cephalic and hindpaw sensory thresholds were monitored hourly over 5 hours to determine the efficacy of ubrogepant in reversing bright light stress-induced cutaneous allodynia. A dose of ubrogepant effective in the medication overuse headache model (100 mg/kg) was then selected to determine if repeated administration would produce latent sensitization. Rats were administered six oral doses of ubrogepant 100 mg/kg, sumatriptan 10 mg/kg (positive control), or vehicle over 2 weeks, and cutaneous allodynia was evaluated regularly. Testing continued until mechanosensitivity returned to baseline levels. Rats were then challenged with bright light stress on days 20 and 21, and periorbital and hindpaw cutaneous allodynia was measured. On days 28 to 32, the same groups received a nitric oxide donor (sodium nitroprusside 3 mg/kg, i.p.), and cutaneous allodynia was assessed hourly over 5 hours. Results Sumatriptan elicited cutaneous allodynia in both cephalic and hindpaw regions; cutaneous allodynia resolved to baseline levels after cessation of drug administration (14 days). Sumatriptan priming resulted in generalized and delayed cutaneous allodynia, evoked by either bright light stress (day 21) or nitric oxide donor (day 28). Ubrogepant dose-dependently blocked both stress- and nitric oxide donor-induced cephalic and hindpaw allodynia in the sumatriptan-induced medication overuse headache model with a 50% effective dose of ∼50 mg/kg. Unlike sumatriptan, ubrogepant 100 mg/kg in repeated effective doses did not produce cutaneous allodynia or latent sensitization. Conclusions Both ubrogepant and sumatriptan demonstrated efficacy as acute medications for stress- and nitric oxide donor-evoked cephalic allodynia in a preclinical model of medication overuse headache, consistent with their clinical efficacy in the acute treatment of migraine. However, in contrast to sumatriptan, repeated treatment with ubrogepant did not induce cutaneous allodynia or latent sensitization. These studies suggest ubrogepant may offer an effective acute treatment of migraine without risk of medication overuse headache. Trial Registration Number: Not applicable


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Caroline Bonnet ◽  
Jizhe Hao ◽  
Nancy Osorio ◽  
Anne Donnet ◽  
Virginie Penalba ◽  
...  

Abstract Medication-overuse headaches (MOH) occur with both over-the-counter and pain-relief medicines, including paracetamol, opioids and combination analgesics. The mechanisms that lead to MOH are still uncertain. Here, we show that abnormal activation of Nav1.9 channels by Nitric Oxide (NO) is responsible for MOH induced by triptan migraine medicine. Deletion of the Scn11a gene in MOH mice abrogates NO-mediated symptoms, including cephalic and extracephalic allodynia, photophobia and phonophobia. NO strongly activates Nav1.9 in dural afferent neurons from MOH but not normal mice. Abnormal activation of Nav1.9 triggers CGRP secretion, causing artery dilatation and degranulation of mast cells. In turn, released mast cell mediators potentiates Nav1.9 in meningeal nociceptors, exacerbating inflammation and pain signal. Analysis of signaling networks indicates that PKA is downregulated in trigeminal neurons from MOH mice, relieving its inhibitory action on NO-Nav1.9 coupling. Thus, anomalous activation of Nav1.9 channels by NO, as a result of chronic medication, promotes MOH.


Cephalalgia ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 37 (6) ◽  
pp. 560-570 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caroline Machado Kopruszinski ◽  
Jennifer Yanhua Xie ◽  
Nathan Mackenzie Eyde ◽  
Bethany Remeniuk ◽  
Sarah Walter ◽  
...  

Objective The objective of this study was the determination of the role of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) in the induction of medication overuse headache (MOH)-related migraine in an injury-free preclinical model. Methods Rats were primed by a 7-day period of exposure to acute migraine therapies including sumatriptan and morphine. After an additional 14-day drug-free period, rats were exposed to putative migraine triggers including bright light stress (BLS) or nitric oxide (NO) donor in the presence or absence of TEV48125, a fully humanized CGRP antibody. Cutaneous allodynia (CA) was used as an outcome measure and CGRP blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) levels were measured. Results BLS and NO donor challenge evoked delayed, long-lasting CA selectively in rats that were previously treated with sumatriptan or morphine. BLS produced a significant increase in CGRP in the plasma, but not CSF, in animals that were previously exposed to sumatriptan compared to saline controls. TEV48125 did not modify baseline tactile thresholds or produce behavioral side effects, but significantly inhibited both BLS- and NO donor-induced CA in animals that were previously primed with sumatriptan or morphine; an isotype control protein that does not bind CGRP had no effect. Interpretation These data suggest that acute migraine medications may promote MOH in susceptible individuals through CGRP-dependent mechanisms and that anti-CGRP antibodies may be a useful clinical strategy for the treatment of MOH.


2018 ◽  
Vol 48 ◽  
pp. 153-159
Author(s):  
Junxia Li ◽  
Chunfu Chen ◽  
Ligong Zhang ◽  
Xiaochen Cui ◽  
Chuanqiao Wei ◽  
...  

Cephalalgia ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 589-596 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Relja ◽  
A Granato ◽  
A Bratina ◽  
RM Antonello ◽  
M Zorzon

One hundred and one patients suffering from chronic daily headache (CDH) and medication overuse were treated, in an in-patient setting, with abrupt discontinuation of the medication overused, intravenous hydrating, and intravenous administration of benzodiazepines and ademetionine. The mean time to CDH resolution was 8.8 days. The in-patient withdrawal protocol used was effective, safe and well tolerated. There was a trend for a shorter time to CDH resolution in patients who overused triptans ( P = 0.062). There was no correlation between time to CDH resolution and either the type of initial primary headache or duration of medication abuse, whereas time to CDH resolution was related to daily drug intake ( P = 0.01). In multiple regression analysis, daily drug intake, age and type of medication overused were independent predictors of time to CDH resolution. At 3-months' follow-up, no patient had relapsed and was again overusing symptomatic medications.


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