| Literature DB >> 33910499 |
Tatiane Teru Takahashi1,2, Raffaele Ornello3, Giuseppe Quatrosi4, Angelo Torrente5, Maria Albanese6, Simone Vigneri7,8, Martina Guglielmetti9,10, Cristiano Maria De Marco9, Camille Dutordoir11, Enrico Colangeli12, Matteo Fuccaro13, Davide Di Lenola14, Valerio Spuntarelli15, Laura Pilati5, Salvatore Di Marco5, Annelies Van Dycke16, Ramla Abuukar Abdullahi17,18, Antoinette Maassen van den Brink18, Paolo Martelletti9,19.
Abstract
Chronic headache is particularly prevalent in migraineurs and it can progress to a condition known as medication overuse headache (MOH). MOH is a secondary headache caused by overuse of analgesics or other medications such as triptans to abort acute migraine attacks. The worsening of headache symptoms associated with medication overuse (MO) generally ameliorates following interruption of regular medication use, although the primary headache symptoms remain unaffected. MO patients may also develop certain behaviors such as ritualized drug administration, psychological drug attachment, and withdrawal symptoms that have been suggested to correlate with drug addiction. Although several reviews have been performed on this topic, to the authors best knowledge none of them have examined this topic from the addiction point of view. Therefore, we aimed to identify features in MO and drug addiction that may correlate. We initiate the review by introducing the classes of analgesics and medications that can cause MOH and those with high risk to produce MO. We further compare differences between sensitization resulting from MO and from drug addiction, the neuronal pathways that may be involved, and the genetic susceptibility that may overlap between the two conditions. Finally, ICHD recommendations to treat MOH will be provided herein.Entities:
Keywords: Dependence; Drug abuse; Migraine; Substance abuse; Vulnerability
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33910499 PMCID: PMC8080402 DOI: 10.1186/s10194-021-01224-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Fig. 1Simplified schematic of behaviors expressed by MO and drug addiction patients
Fig. 2Simplified summary of changes produced by repeated administration of triptans or analgesics
Fig. 3Simplified neuroimaging findings that overlap for MO and drug addiction