Abstract

Studies suggest that migraine pain has a vascular component. The prevailing dogma is that peripheral vasoconstriction activates baroreceptors in central, large arteries. Dilatation of central vessels stimulates nociceptors and induces cortical spreading depression. Studies investigating nitric oxide (NO) donors support the indicated hypothesis that pain is amplified when acutely administered. In this review, we provide an alternate hypothesis which, if substantiated, may provide therapeutic opportunities for attenuating migraine frequency and severity. We suggest that in migraines, heightened sympathetic tone results in progressive central microvascular constriction. Suboptimal parenchymal blood flow, we suggest, activates nociceptors and triggers headache pain onset. Administration of NO donors could paradoxically promote constriction of the microvasculature as a consequence of larger upstream central artery vasodilatation. Inhibitors of NO production are reported to alleviate migraine pain. We describe how constriction of larger upstream arteries, induced by NO synthesis inhibitors, may result in a compensatory dilatory response of the microvasculature. The restoration of central capillary blood flow may be the primary mechanism for pain relief. Attenuating the propensity for central capillary constriction and promoting a more dilatory phenotype may reduce frequency and severity of migraines. Here, we propose consideration of two dietary nutraceuticals for reducing migraine risk: L-arginine and aged garlic extracts.

Highlights

  • Migraine is the most common and one of the costliest neurological disorders to treat [1,2].Migraines are described to occur through a stress-induction pathway and may, in some individuals, represent a continuum of tension headaches [3]

  • We found no studies that reported on the effects of aged garlic extract (AGE) in the context of migraine

  • Given the positive action on vasodilatation exerted by L-arginine and AGE in the above cardiovascular studies, we surmise that these agents should be investigated in future randomised controlled trials for prevention of migraines induced by cerebral microvascular constriction

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Summary

A Paradoxical Vasodilatory Nutraceutical

Devahuti Rai Chaliha 1,2 , Mauro Vaccarezza 1,3 , Ryu Takechi 1,2 , Virginie Lam 1,2 , Eric Visser 4 , Peter Drummond 5 and John Charles Louis Mamo 1,2, *.

Introduction
A Revised
Vasodilatory Effects of L-arginine
Vasodilatory Effects of Aged Garlic Extract
Pharmacological Treatment of Migraines by Modifying Cerebrovascular Tone
Conclusions
Full Text
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