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CGRP monoclonal antibody prevents the loss of diffuse noxious inhibitory controls (DNIC) in a mouse model of post-traumatic headache.

Caroline M KopruszinskiJoelle M TurnesJuliana SwioklaTroy J WeinsteinTodd J SchwedtDavid W DodickTrent AndersonEdita NavratilovaFrank Porreca
Published in: Cephalalgia : an international journal of headache (2021)
Sequestration of calcitonin-gene related peptide in the initial stages following mild traumatic brain injury blocked the acute allodynia that may reflect mild traumatic brain injury-related post-traumatic headache and, additionally, prevented the loss of net descending inhibition within central pain modulation pathways. As loss of conditioned pain modulation has been linked to multiple persistent pain conditions, dysregulation of descending modulatory pathways may contribute to the persistence of post-traumatic headache. Additionally, evaluation of the conditioned pain modulation/diffuse noxious inhibitory controls response may serve as a biomarker of vulnerability for chronic/persistent pain. These findings suggest that early anti-calcitonin-gene related peptide intervention has the potential to be effective both for the treatment of mild traumatic brain injury-induced post-traumatic headache, as well as inhibiting mechanisms that may promote post-traumatic headache persistence.
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