Enhanced post-traumatic headache-like behaviors and diminished contribution of peripheral CGRP in female rats following a mild closed head injury.
Dara BreeKimberly MackenzieJennifer StrattonDan LevyPublished in: Cephalalgia : an international journal of headache (2020)
Development of post-traumatic headache-like pain behaviors following a mild closed head injury, and responsiveness to treatment in rats is sexually dimorphic. When compared to the data obtained from male rats in the previous study, female rats display a prolonged state of cephalic hyperalgesia, increased responsiveness to a headache trigger, and a poorer effectiveness of an early and prolonged anti-calcitonin gene-related peptide treatment. The increased risk of females to develop post-traumatic headache may be linked to enhanced responsiveness of peripheral and/or central pain pathways and a mechanism independent of peripheral calcitonin gene-related peptide signaling.