A defect in serotonergic analgesia and a hyperalgesic state are proposed as features common to headache and fibromyalgia. The benefit to both migraine and fibromyalgia from inhibiting ionotropic N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor activity implies that redundant hyperalgesia-related neuroplastic changes are crucial for severe or chronic migraine and primary fibromyalgia. The fact that migraine and primary fibromyalgia share some pivotal set-up of serotonergic and excitatory amino acid systems led us to analyse epidemiological data supporting the hypothesis that analgesic disruption and a consequent hyperalgesic state are mechanisms of both migraine and fibromyalgia. Beyond demonstrating the comorbidity between migraine and primary fibromyalgia, the data suggest that migraine may represent a risk factor for fibromyalgia.
Fibromyalgia and headache. Failure of serotonergic analgesia and N-methyl-D-aspartate-mediated neuronal plasticity: their common clues. Cephalalgia, 18, 41-44 (1998)
VOLPE, ANNA RITA;
1998-01-01
Abstract
A defect in serotonergic analgesia and a hyperalgesic state are proposed as features common to headache and fibromyalgia. The benefit to both migraine and fibromyalgia from inhibiting ionotropic N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor activity implies that redundant hyperalgesia-related neuroplastic changes are crucial for severe or chronic migraine and primary fibromyalgia. The fact that migraine and primary fibromyalgia share some pivotal set-up of serotonergic and excitatory amino acid systems led us to analyse epidemiological data supporting the hypothesis that analgesic disruption and a consequent hyperalgesic state are mechanisms of both migraine and fibromyalgia. Beyond demonstrating the comorbidity between migraine and primary fibromyalgia, the data suggest that migraine may represent a risk factor for fibromyalgia.Pubblicazioni consigliate
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