Several animal studies suggest that nitric oxide (NO) plays a role in central and peripheral modulation of nociception. Glyceryl trinitrate GTN) exerts its physiological actions via donation of NO. The purpose of the present study was to examine the effect of this NO donor on nociceptive thresholds in man. On two different study days separated by at least, week 12 healthy subjects received a staircase infusion of GTN (0.015, 0.25. 1.0, 2.0 mg/kg/min. 20 min each dose) or placebo in a randomized double-blind crossover design. Before the infusion and after 15 min of infusion on each dose, pressure pain detection and tolerance thresholds were determined by pressure a gometry (Somomedic AB, Sweden) in three different anatomic regions (finger, a temporal region with interposed myofascial tissue and a temporal region without interposed myofascial tissue. Relative to placebo, the three higher GTN doses induced a decrease in both detection and tolerance thresholds in the temporal region with interposed myofascial tissue ( p=0.003 detection and p=0.002 tolerance threshold: Friedman). No such changes were observed in the other two stimulated regions. These results could reflect central facilitation of nociception by NO. However, we regard convergence, of nociceptive input from pericranial myofascial tissue and from cephalic blood vessels dilated by NO as a more likely, explanation of our findings.
Objective: Our objective was to describe body composition, lipid profile, and health-related quality of life (HRQL) in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) in relation to the development of posttraumatic hypopituitarism. Design: This is a cross-sectional evaluation with a nested prospective substudy. Patients: The cross-sectional cohort included 104 hospitalized patients with TBI [26 females/78 males; median age 41 yr (range 18–64); body mass index (BMI) 25 kg/m2 (range 17–39); and severity, mild (Glasgow Coma Scale score (GCS) 13–15) n = 44, moderate (GCS 9–12) n = 20, and severe (GCS <9) n = 40)]. A nested cohort of 46 patients was followed prospectively. Measurements: BMI, waist circumference, lipid profile, total- and regional-fat mass were assessed 3 and 12 months (prospective) or only 12 months (cross-sectional) posttraumatically. HRQL questionnaires (Nottingham Health Profile, EuroQoL-5D, and the GH deficiency (GHD) specific instrument, Quality of Life Assessment of GHD in Adults) were comple...
In a randomized, multi‐centre, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled, parallel group study, the efficacy of 100 mg oral sumatriptan was compared with that of placebo in the treatment of episodic tension‐type headache. The patients were recruited from the general population in the vicinity of the study centres, by randomly mailed invitations. One or more attacks were treated with sumatriptan by 54 patients and with placebo by 57 patients. A seven‐point verbal rating scale was used for hourly assessments of headache relief, 1–4 h after treatment According to the predefined primary end‐point of the study, which was moderate or complete relief of headache 2 and 4 h after treatment of the first attack, there was no significant difference between sumatriptan and placebo treatment Sumatriptan did perform statistically significantly better than placebo at some time points, but the effect was not considered clinically relevant We conclude that sumatriptan should not be used in treatment of tension‐type headache. The marked difference in effect of sumatriptan in treatment of migraine and tension‐type headache argues against the idea that migraine and tension‐type headache are part of a continuum of headache disorders.
A new instrument, the Diagnostic Headache Diary, based on the operational diagnostic criteria of the International Headache Society (IHS), was tested in 61 migraine patients from a headache research clinic using the clinical diagnosis (IHS criteria) for comparison. All patients kept the diary for one to eight months. The clinical and diary diagnosis of migraine with and without aura was the same in, respectively, 72 and 87% of the patients. Nausea, photophobia and phonophobia tended to be more pronounced at the clinical interview. The diary identified 20 more cases of episodic tension-type headache and 15 fewer cases of chronic tension-type headache than the clinical interview. Two blinded observers always made the same IHS diagnoses when interpreting the diagnostic headache diary. A combination of a clinical interview and the diagnostic headache diary gives a qualitatively and quantitatively more precise diagnosis than a clinical interview alone.