Back to Search
Start Over
Serotonin and migraine
- Source :
- Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 600
- Publication Year :
- 1990
-
Abstract
- Migraine has long been considered as a "vascular headache" but clearly neurological mechanisms are involved. The pathophysiology appears to somehow involve serotonin, both peripherally and centrally, but its involvement may be just epiphenomenal. Adding to the enigma it is apparent that many of the presently available drugs for the treatment of migraine interact in one way or another with serotonin receptors. However, they tend to have a number of other unrelated actions and they are only of limited clinical value. Interestingly a promising new drug for the treatment of the acute attack, sumatriptan, has a very selective action as an agonist at a specific 5-HT1-like receptor sub-type, mediating vasoconstriction, which is localized on cranial blood vessels. Its action may, or may not, be independent of any involvement of serotonin in the genesis of migraine. Hopefully though, current attempts to determine sumatriptan's mechanism of action will shed further light on the pathology of migraine itself and the putative involvement of serotonin.
- Subjects :
- Agonist
Serotonin
medicine.drug_class
business.industry
General Neuroscience
Migraine Disorders
Brain
medicine.disease
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Sumatriptan
History and Philosophy of Science
Migraine
Mechanism of action
Receptors, Serotonin
medicine
Humans
Vascular headache
medicine.symptom
business
Neuroscience
Vasoconstriction
5-HT receptor
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00778923
- Volume :
- 600
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....1bb1cd575ed2462d25f3dbc68a50681c