Stillman Mark J
Department of Neurology, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, 9500 Euclid Avenue, OH 44195, USA.
Headache. 2006 Jun;46(6):925-33. doi: 10.1111/j.1526-4610.2006.00436.x.
To describe the clinical characteristics and laboratory findings of cluster headache patients whose headaches responded to testosterone replacement therapy.
Current evidence points to hypothalamic dysfunction, with increased metabolic hyperactivity in the region of the suprachiasmatic nucleus, as being important in the genesis of cluster headaches. This is clinically borne out in the circadian and diurnal behavior of these headaches. For years it has been recognized that male cluster headache patients appear overmasculinized. Recent neuroendocrine and sleep studies now point to an association between gonadotropin and corticotropin levels and hypothalamically entrained pineal secretion of melatonin.
Seven male and 2 female patients, seen between July 2004 and February 2005, and between the ages of 32 and 56, are reported with histories of treatment resistant cluster headaches accompanied by borderline low or low serum testosterone levels. The patients failed to respond to individually tailored medical regimens, including melatonin doses of 12 mg a day or higher, high flow oxygen, maximally tolerated verapamil, antiepileptic agents, and parenteral serotonin agonists. Seven of the 9 patients met 2004 International Classification for the Diagnosis of Headache criteria for chronic cluster headaches; the other 2 patients had episodic cluster headaches of several months duration. After neurological and physical examination all patients had laboratory investigations including fasting lipid panel, PSA (where indicated), LH, FSH, and testosterone levels (both free and total). All 9 patients demonstrated either abnormally low or low, normal testosterone levels. After supplementation with either pure testosterone in 5 of 7 male patients or combination testosterone/estrogen therapy in both female patients, the patients achieved cluster headache freedom for the first 24 hours. Four male chronic cluster patients, all with abnormally low testosterone levels, achieved remission.
Abnormal testosterone levels in patients with episodic or chronic cluster headaches refractory to maximal medical management may predict a therapeutic response to testosterone replacement therapy. In the described cases, diurnal variation of attacks, a seasonal cluster pattern, and previous, transient responsiveness to melatonin therapy pointed to the hypothalamus as the site of neurological dysfunction. Prospective studies pairing hormone levels and polysomnographic data are needed.
描述头痛对睾酮替代疗法有反应的丛集性头痛患者的临床特征和实验室检查结果。
目前的证据表明,下丘脑功能障碍,视交叉上核区域代谢活动增加,在丛集性头痛的发病机制中起重要作用。这在这些头痛的昼夜节律和日间行为中得到了临床证实。多年来人们已经认识到男性丛集性头痛患者表现出过度男性化。最近的神经内分泌和睡眠研究现在指出促性腺激素和促肾上腺皮质激素水平与下丘脑调节的褪黑素松果体分泌之间存在关联。
报告了7例男性和2例女性患者,于2004年7月至2005年2月间就诊,年龄在32至56岁之间,有治疗抵抗性丛集性头痛病史,伴有临界低或低血清睾酮水平。这些患者对个体化定制的医疗方案无反应,包括每天12毫克或更高剂量的褪黑素、高流量氧气、最大耐受剂量的维拉帕米、抗癫痫药物和胃肠外5-羟色胺激动剂。9例患者中有7例符合2004年国际头痛诊断分类标准中的慢性丛集性头痛;另外2例患者有持续数月的发作性丛集性头痛。经过神经和体格检查后,所有患者都进行了实验室检查,包括空腹血脂、PSA(如有指征)、LH、FSH和睾酮水平(游离和总睾酮)。所有9例患者均表现出异常低或低正常睾酮水平。7例男性患者中有5例补充纯睾酮,2例女性患者接受睾酮/雌激素联合治疗后,患者在最初24小时内实现了丛集性头痛缓解。4例男性慢性丛集性头痛患者,睾酮水平均异常低,实现了缓解。
发作性或慢性丛集性头痛患者在最大程度的药物治疗无效时,睾酮水平异常可能预示对睾酮替代疗法有治疗反应。在所描述的病例中,发作的昼夜变化、季节性丛集模式以及先前对褪黑素疗法的短暂反应表明下丘脑是神经功能障碍的部位。需要进行前瞻性研究,将激素水平与多导睡眠图数据配对。