Di Clemente Laura, Coppola Gianluca, Magis Delphine, Gérardy Pierre-Yves, Fumal Arnaud, De Pasqua Victor, Di Piero Vittorio, Schoenen Jean
Headache Research Unit, Department of Neurology, University of Liège, CHR Citadelle, Bld. du 12ème de Ligne 1, B-4000 Liège, Belgium.
Pain. 2009 Jul;144(1-2):156-61. doi: 10.1016/j.pain.2009.04.018. Epub 2009 May 19.
Nitroglycerin (NTG), a NO donor, induces an attack in migraine patients approximately 4-6 h after administration. The causative mechanisms are not known, but the long delay leaves room for a central effect, such as a change in neuronal excitability and synaptic transmission of various CNS areas involved in pain and behaviour including trigeminal nucleus caudalis and monoaminergic brain stem nuclei. To explore the central action of NTG, we have studied its effects on amplitude and habituation of the nociceptive blink reflex (nBR) and the visual evoked potential (VEP) before, 1 h and 4 h after administration of NTG (1.2 mg sublingual) or placebo (vehicle sublingual) in two groups of 10 healthy volunteers. We found a significant decrease in nBR pain and reflex thresholds both 1 and 4 h post-NTG. At the 4 h time point R2 latency was shorter (p=0.04) and R2 response area increased (p<0.01) after NTG but not after placebo. Habituation tended to become more pronounced after both NTG and placebo administration. There was a significant amplitude increase in the 5th VEP block (p=0.03) at 1h after NTG and in the 1st block (p=0.04) at 4 h. VEP habituation was replaced by potentiation at both delays after NTG; the change in habituation slope was significant at 1h (p=0.02). There were no significant VEP changes in subjects who received sublingual placebo. In conclusion, we found that in healthy subjects sublingual NTG, but not its vehicle, induces changes in a trigeminal nociceptive reflex and an evoked cortical response which are comparable to those found immediately before and during an attack of migraine. These changes could be relevant for the attack-triggering effect of NTG in migraineurs.
硝酸甘油(NTG)作为一种一氧化氮供体,在给药后约4 - 6小时会诱发偏头痛患者发作。其致病机制尚不清楚,但较长的延迟为中枢效应留出了空间,例如涉及疼痛和行为的各个中枢神经系统区域(包括三叉神经尾侧核和单胺能脑干核)的神经元兴奋性和突触传递发生变化。为了探究NTG的中枢作用,我们在两组各10名健康志愿者中,研究了在舌下含服NTG(1.2毫克)或安慰剂(舌下含服赋形剂)之前、给药后1小时和4小时,NTG对伤害性眨眼反射(nBR)的幅度和习惯化以及视觉诱发电位(VEP)的影响。我们发现,NTG给药后1小时和4小时,nBR的疼痛和反射阈值均显著降低。在4小时时间点,NTG给药后R2潜伏期缩短(p = 0.04),R2反应面积增加(p < 0.01),而安慰剂给药后则无此现象。NTG和安慰剂给药后,习惯化都倾向于变得更加明显。NTG给药后1小时,第5个VEP波组的幅度显著增加(p = 0.03),4小时时第1个波组的幅度显著增加(p = 0.04)。NTG给药后两个延迟时间点,VEP的习惯化都被增强所取代;习惯化斜率的变化在1小时时显著(p = 0.02)。接受舌下安慰剂的受试者VEP没有显著变化。总之,我们发现,在健康受试者中,舌下含服NTG而非其赋形剂会诱发三叉神经伤害性反射和诱发皮质反应的变化,这些变化与偏头痛发作前和发作期间立即观察到的变化相当。这些变化可能与NTG对偏头痛患者的发作触发作用有关。