| Literature DB >> 33630252 |
Carl H Göbel1,2, Axel Heinze3, Sarah Karstedt4,3, Svenja Clasen3, Hartmut Göbel3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Occipital nerve stimulation (ONS) is a specific form of peripheral neuromodulation used in the treatment of chronic pain disorders. A particular field of application is in the therapy of treatment-refractory headaches, especially of chronic migraine. The precise mode of action is unknown. It is presumed that central and peripheral sensitization are reduced in patients with chronic headache. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of ONS on pain-modulatory mechanisms in the trigeminocervical area in patients with chronic migraine.Entities:
Keywords: Blink reflex; Central sensitization; Chronic migraine; Dynamic stimulation; Mode of action; ONS; Occipital nerve stimulation; Orbicularis oculi reflex; Peripheral sensitization; Standardized air flow
Year: 2021 PMID: 33630252 PMCID: PMC8119542 DOI: 10.1007/s40122-021-00242-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pain Ther
Fig. 1Standardized quantitative measurement of the orbicularis oculi reflex triggered dynamically with an air stream. The patients wear protective glasses. On the left side, there is a circular opening (7 mm diameter). An air hose is inserted into this side opening of the glasses. This is connected to an oxygen bottle, from which oxygen flows constantly at 7 l/min. The air flow served as a standardized stimulus for the activation of the orbicularis oculi reflex. To quantitatively record the blink frequency as a reflex response, the eyelid closures were filmed with a video camera through the protective glasses and documented in a standardized way (eyelid closures per minute)
Blink frequency per minute between baseline and experimental triggering of the orbicularis oculi reflex depending on active or inactive occipital nerve stimulation
| ONS ON eyelid closures/min | ONS OFF eyelid closures/min | Difference | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | Mean ± SD | 22.63 ± 15.96 | 20.63 ± 17.55 | 2.00 ± 13.94 | 0.327 |
| Median (min; max) | 20.00 (8; 57) | 14.50 (3; 55) | |||
| With airflow | Mean ± SD | 30.00 ± 17.22 | 39.38 ± 21.85 | – 9.38 ± 10.84 | 0.035 |
| Median (min; max) | 26.50 (13; 58) | 38.50 (12; 84) | |||
| Difference | Mean ± SD | 7.38 ± 20.14 | 18.75 ± 14.30 | – 11.38 ± 9.81 | 0.021 |
| Median (min; max) | 3.00 (– 20; 32) | 17.50 (2; 42) |
The arithmetic mean and standard deviation as well as median, minimum, and maximum values are given (p values in the Wilcoxon signed-rank test)
Fig. 2Blink frequency per minute between baseline and experimental triggering of the orbicularis oculi reflex depending on active or inactive occipital nerve stimulation (Wilcoxon signed-rank test)
Fig. 3Difference of blink frequency per minute between baseline and experimental triggering of the orbicularis oculi reflex depending on active or inactive occipital nerve stimulation (Wilcoxon signed-rank test)
| Occipital nerve stimulation (ONS) is a special form of peripheral neuromodulation for the treatment of chronic pain disorders, especially treatment-refractory headaches such as chronic migraines. |
| The exact mechanism of action is not known. A reduction in central and peripheral sensitization in patients with chronic headaches is assumed. |
| In order to confirm this hypothesis, patients with chronic migraine with and without active ONS should be investigated to determine which effects the ONS has on the orbicularis-oculi-reflex triggered dynamically with an air stream. |
| The results show that in active ONS compared to inactive ONS in patients with chronic migraine, the orbicularis oculi reflex is significantly reduced. |
| This indicates that ONS is able to directly counteract the trigeminally mediated central sensitization in chronic migraine. This could protectively reduce the effects of aversive peripheral irritation. |