Primary short-lasting headaches broadly divide themselves into those associated with prominent cranial autonomic symptoms, so-called trigeminal autonomic cephalgias (TACs), and those where autonomic symptoms are minimal or absent. The group of TACs comprises cluster headache (CH), paroxysmal hemicrania, and short-lasting unilateral neuralgiform headache attacks with conjunctival injection and tearing (SUNCT syndrome) (
35). The concept of trigeminal autonomic cephalgias underlines a possibly shared pathophysiologic basis for these syndromes that is not shared with other primary headaches, such as migraine or tension-type headache (
24). As thus far findings in functional imaging of primary headache syndromes are specific to the disease (
60,
54), these techniques may be helpful in unravelling the degrees of relationship between clinically analogous headache syndromes.
TACs are relatively rare when compared to migraine or tension-type headache, which is likely to be why they are poorly recognized in primary care. The most remarkable of the clinical features of CH is the striking rhythmicity or cycling of the attacks and bouts. CH is probably the most severe pain syndrome known to humans, with female patients describing each attack as being worse than childbirth. The syndrome is well defined from a clinical point of view (
35) and despite the fact that it has been recognized in the literature for more than two centuries (
41), its pathophysiology has been hitherto poorly understood. Neuroimaging has made substantial contributions in recent times to understanding this relatively rare but important syndrome best illustrated by the advances in understanding CH.
THE ISSUE OF VASCULAR VERSUS NEUROGENIC MECHANISMS
In contrast to migraine, where at least two experimental models have been developed and tested in clinically relevant settings by pharmacologic means, CH has not been well studied in experimental animals and developments have come directly from human studies. A comprehensive model for CH has to explain the unilateral headache as well as the sympathetic impairment and parasympathetic activation. Recent functional imaging data may allow such a model to be developed.
Despite the large number of investigations in recent years, the issue of peripheral (e.g., vessel or perivascular inflammation) versus central nervous system (e.g., hypothalamic or parasympathetic) mechanisms is still unresolved. The pathophysiologic concept of
vascular headaches is based on the idea that changes in vessel diameter or gross changes in cerebral blood flow would trigger pain and thus explain the mechanism of action of vasoconstrictor drugs, such as ergotamine (
85).
CH specifically has been attributed to an inflammatory process in the cavernous sinus and tributary veins (
33,
64). Inflammation has been thought to obliterate venous out-flow from the cavernous sinus on one side, thus injuring the traversing sympathetic fibers of the intracranial internal carotid artery and its branches. According to this theory, the active period ends when the inflammation is suppressed and the sympathetic fibers partially or fully recover. This theory is based substantially on abnormal findings using orbital phlebography in CH patients (
31,
28,
77) and on the fact that nitroglycerin (NTG) and other vasodilators can induce an acute CH attack (
13).
However, in a study on CH patients using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), no definite pathologic changes were found in the area of the cavernous (
78). Using single photon emission computerized tomography (SPECT), parasellar hyperactivity was present in 50 (episodic) to 80% (chronic) of CH patients and in 70% of migraineurs (
76). Similar findings on orbital phlebography can be seen in the cavernous region in patients with Tolosa-Hunt syndrome (
29), hemicrania continua (
3), SUNCT
syndrome (
32,
44), and chronic paroxysmal hemicrania (
3,
29), suggesting the changes are not specific for CH. Moreover, given the circadian rhythmicity of attacks and cycling of bouts (
34,
48,
47), a purely vasogenic cause cannot easily explain the entire picture of CH (
23). In view of the striking relapsing-remitting course (
48), its seasonal variation (
48), and the clockwise regularity (
14), the concept of a central origin of CH needs consideration (
14,
45).
FUNCTIONAL NEUROIMAGING
Positron emission tomography (PET) may represent the best currently available technique for visualising
in vivo changes in regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in humans when activations in the brain with a relatively long time constant, such as those in most headache syndromes, are to be investigated. Modern high-resolution PET scanning allows the detection of subtle changes in rCBF during defined behavioral tasks and provides an index of synaptic activity relating networks of regions to tested brain functions (
17,
18). CH attacks can be elicited with NTG during the active cluster period without significant side effects (
13). Clinical and experimental data show NTG-provoked and spontaneous cluster attacks to be comparable (
16,
22), and NTG does not alter rCBF significantly (
40,
43). The headache can be rapidly and effectively aborted with sumatriptan. This approach therefore allows detection
of brain regions with increased blood flow during NTGinduced cluster attacks, focusing interest on the hypothalamic region (
Table 90-3).
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