Batch,
Looking at the question he asked, it pretty much involved oxygen use.
Quote:I'm really interested in oxygen and what it's doing to our brain. IS it activating our hypothalamus? Or is it really just vasoconstriction at work? Anybody have any other info on that?
Your post was good coverage of the oxygen abortive mechanism.
Following that question ...
Quote:I like to know as many pieces of the puzzle that I can , that's all. I'm a neurology nut...And one of my strong points has always been to be able to take small parts of information and put them together to come up with a more complete idea of what's going on. I 100% believe that the more knowledge I have about the beast, what keeps it here and what makes it go away (and why), the better. You might just be surprised at the info you can come up with when you put a whole lot of small stuff together.
What keeps them here is not using oxygen.
What makes them happen is a harder question.
The mechanisms involved with oyxgen you have mentioned seem to be encompassing enough to be more than a small piece.
This is an article about an unrelated disease, but in its symptoms it brings up much of the process you described.
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Quote:Central neurogenic hyperventilation (CNH)
CNH is the human body's response to reduced carbon dioxide levels in the blood. This reduction in carbon dioxide is caused by contraction of cranial arteries
Symptoms of CNH have been observed to vary according to the progression of CNH. The initial symptoms of CNH include a low arterial partial pressure of carbon dioxide, a high or normal arterial partial pressure of oxygen, high arterial pH, and tachypnea.[3][4][5][9][10] The partial pressure of carbon dioxide has been noted by Yushi et al. to drop as low as 6.7 mmHg, while oxygen saturation remains at 99-100%.[9] Respiratory alkalosis is induced in people affected with CNH, which stimulates the hyperpnea to attempt to compensate the rise of the blood’s pH.[5] Some of the reported cases of CNH claim alkaline cerebral spinal fluid (CSF).
This condition is thought to result from severe hypocapnia that induces blood vessels in the brain to constrict, leading to brain ischemia.[5]
Maybe the footnoted articles may lead somewhere and possibly have something to offer, or it's familiar to you and abets what you've compiled.
Quote:Clearly, there are other mechanisms involved in the cluster headache abort process with oxygen therapy and that's what Ricardo wants to learn. That leads us to a possible question as to which is the predominant mechanism in play ...