Although this post includes a lot of complex biochemistry, the results and conclusions are pretty significant for CH and migraine.
Altered serum levels of kynurenine metabolites in patients affected by cluster headache - The Journal of Headache and Pain
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Quote:The reported efficacy of memantine in the treatment of patients with cluster headache (CH) suggests that NMDA receptors are involved in mechanisms of nociceptive sensitization within the trigeminal system associated with CH. NMDA receptors are activated or inhibited by neuroactive compounds generated by tryptophan metabolism through the kynurenine pathway.
In the accompanying manuscript, we have found that serum levels of all kynurenine metabolites are altered in patients with chronic migraine. Here, we have extended the study to patients affected by episodic or chronic CH as compared to healthy controls.
Method: We assessed serum levels of kynurenine (KYN), kynurenic Acid (KYNA), anthranilic acid (ANA), 3-hydroxy-anthranilic acid (3-HANA), 3-hydroxykynurenine (3-HK), xanthurenic acid (XA), quinolinic acid (QUINA), tryptophan (Trp) and 5-hydroxyindolacetic acid (5-HIAA) by means of a liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS-MS) method in 21 patients affected by CH (15 with episodic and 6 with chronic CH), and 35 age-matched healthy subjects.
Patients with psychiatric co-morbidities, systemic inflammatory, endocrine or neurological disorders, and mental retardation were excluded.
Results: LC/MS-MS analysis of kynurenine metabolites showed significant reductions in the levels of KYN (-36 %), KYNA (-34 %), 3-HK (-51 %), 3-HANA (-54 %), XA (-25 %), 5-HIAA (-39 %) and QUINA (-43 %) in the serum of the overall population of patients affected by CH, as compared to healthy controls. Serum levels of Trp and ANA were instead significantly increased in CH patients (+18 % and +54 %, respectively).
There was no difference in levels of any metabolite between patients affected by episodic and chronic CH, with the exception of KYN levels, which were higher in patients with chronic CH.
Conclusion: The reduced levels of KYNA (an NMDA receptor antagonist) support the hypothesis that NMDA receptors are overactive in CH. A similar reduction in KYNA levels was shown in the accompanying manuscript in patients affected by chronic migraine.
The reduced levels of XA, a putative analgesic compound, may contribute to explain the severity of pain attacks in CH. These data, associated with the data reported in the accompanying manuscript, supports a role for the kynurenine pathway in the pathophysiology of chronic headache disorders.
Published on: 2016-03-22
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An interesting result which includes:
- Similar changes in KYNA (an NMDA receptor antagonist) for people with CH which are similar to people with migraine
- A difference between episodic and chronic CH KYN levels
What this could mean (my interpretation) or questions it asks:
- More links between CH and migraine, potentially explaining why quite a few migraine drugs also work for CH.
- A possible test for chronic CH, especially if the difference in the metabolite starts at the start of the cycle that becomes chronic, although it could just be a result of the accumulative effects of chronic CH.
- A better understanding of some of the biochemical changes associated with CH (and migraine) that could potentially result in additional ways to treat them.
- A possible explanation of the pain levels due to the change in XA, a putative analgesic compound.
Also from the full paper:
Quote:...the increase in serum XA levels found in patients with chronic migraine has been interpreted as a defensive mechanism aimed at reducing the extent of headache in migraine. This potential defense was absent in patients with CH, where serum XA levels were reduced
Quite a difference between CH and migraine! However there are quite a few people with CH and migraine where the migraine can be more severe than "normal" migraines.
Also for CH:
Quote:Alterations of serum kynurenine pathway metabolites have been found in other neuropsychiatric disorders, have been linked to chronic stress and sleep deprivation. Although we did not recruit patients affected by psychiatric comorbidities, we cannot exclude that the chronic stress associated to the active CH condition, often associated with sleep disturbances, might have affected tryptophan metabolism.
Note the link between the biochemistry for CH which is associated with sleep deprivation and stress, both highly typical for someone with CH.