Cluster Headache: On the Mechanism Behind Attack-Related Sweating
- 1 September 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Cephalalgia
- Vol. 3 (3), 175-185
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1468-2982.1983.0303175.x
Abstract
Eighteen cluster headache patients were studied using body heating or exercise tests; all but two of them were also studied with a pilocarpine test (0.1 mg/kg body wt, s.c.). Evaporimeter measurements were made on both sides of the forehead under standard conditions in a thermo room. Heat- and exercise-induced sweating was dearly less pronounced on the symptomatic side than on the non-symptomatic side of the forehead, and was significantly different compared to controls. Pilocarpine on the other hand induced a clearly more pronounced response on the symptomatic side than on the non-symptomatic side, which was also statistically significantly higher than in the control group. These findings suggest a supersensitivity of the sweat glands to pilocarpine on the symptomatic side of the forehead in most cases of cluster headache.Keywords
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