| Literature DB >> 28130626 |
Sebastian Bao Dinh Bui1, Torben Petersen1, Jeppe Nørgaard Poulsen1, Parisa Gazerani2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Airplane Headache (AH) occurs during flights and often appears as an intense, short lasting headache during take-off or landing. Reports are limited on pathological mechanisms underlying the occurrence of this headache. Proper diagnosis and treatments would benefit from identification of potential pathways involved in AH pathogenesis. This study aimed at providing a simulated airplane headache condition as a proxy towards identification of its underlying mechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: Airplane headache; Biomarker; Blood pressure; Cortisol; Pressure chamber; Prostaglandin E2; Pulse; Saturation pulse oxygen; Simulated airplane flight; Thermo imagining
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28130626 PMCID: PMC5272852 DOI: 10.1186/s10194-017-0724-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Demographic characteristics and clinical reports from the AH participants
| Subject no | Gender | Age (year) | AH during simulated flight? | Duration of AH (minutes) | Intensity of pain | Quality of pain | Localization of the headache | Stress during simulated flight? | Anxiety during simulated flight? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | F | 22 | Yes | 15 | 4 | Pulsating | Unilateral | No | Yes |
| 2 | F | 29 | Yes | 20 | 10 | Stabbing | Fronto-orbital | No | No |
| 3 | F | 23 | Yes | 30 | 8 | Stabbing | Unilateral | No | Yes |
| 4 | F | 24 | Yes | 20 | 3 | Jabbing | Fronto-parietal | No | No |
| 5 | F | 25 | Yes | 40 | 7 | Pulsating | Fronto-parietal | No | Yes |
| 6 | M | 23 | Yes | 40 | 3 | Stabbing | Fronto-orbital | No | No |
| 7 | F | 51 | Yes | 20 | 8 | Pulsating | Fronto-orbital | Yes | Yes |
Fig. 1Between and within group comparisons for cortisol (a), PGE2 (b) and SPO (c). SF: Simulated flight. Bars indicate SD. *: p < 0.05. **: p < 0.001
Fig. 2Between and within group comparisons for pulse rate (a), SBP (b), DBP (c) and facial skin temperature (FST) (d). SF: Simulated flight. Bars indicate SD.*: p < 0.05
Clinical characteristics of real-time AH (n = 75) compared with simulated AH
| Characteristics | Real-time AH [ | Simulated AH |
|---|---|---|
| Number of subjects | 75 | 7 |
| Onset of AH | Mainly at landing | Descending phase |
| Duration of AH | 10-30 min | 26 mina |
| Intensity of pain | 8.8/10 | 6.1/10a |
| Quality of pain | Stabbing, pulsating | Stabbing, pulsating |
| Localization | Fronto-orbital, unilateral | Fronto-orbital, unilateral |
aMean calculations of all the subjects in the AH-group (n = 7)
Fig. 3Proposed mechanisms underlying development of AH. Berilgen et al. [7] suggest that AH results from local inflammation caused by sinus barotrauma due to changes in the atmospheric pressure during the landing. The first degree of sinus barotrauma [41] is a short lasting discomfort with almost no anatomical changes in the sinuses and can be considered as a potential player in AH. Most passengers sense pressure changes during landing and gas trapping in the sinuses often occurs that can contribute in sinus barotrauma and a transient local inflammation. Since we identified that PGE2, an inflammation mediator, was higher in AH-group and SPO was lower, we suggest that a mild hypoxia may occur during a flight travel that may lead to reflective but perhaps mild hyperventilation. Hyperventilation can result in decreasing levels of carbon dioxide (CO2) and elevated blood pH [42]. As a response to the decreased CO2, vasodilation may occur [42]. Vasodilation in the cerebral arteries as a reaction to local inflammation or hypoxia can theoretically lead to development of AH. This hypothesis should be examined. Furthermore, interrelationship between anxiety, stress and other environmental and internal subjective factors linked with AH should also be investigated thoroughly to approve or falsify the theoretical model presented here