AMITRIPTYLINE, A COMBINED SEROTONIN AND NORADRENALINE REUPTAKE INHIBITOR, REDUCES EXTEROCEPTIVE SUPPRESSION OF TEMPORAL MUSCLE-ACTIVITY IN PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC TENSION-TYPE HEADACHE
L. Bendtsen et al., AMITRIPTYLINE, A COMBINED SEROTONIN AND NORADRENALINE REUPTAKE INHIBITOR, REDUCES EXTEROCEPTIVE SUPPRESSION OF TEMPORAL MUSCLE-ACTIVITY IN PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC TENSION-TYPE HEADACHE, ELECTROMYOGRAPHY AND MOTOR CONTROL-ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY AND CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 101(5), 1996, pp. 418-422
Although reflexes in human jaw muscles have been extensively studied,
the neurotransmitters involved in the regulation of these reflexes are
not well known. The aim of the present study was to investigate wheth
er amitriptyline, a combined serotonin and noradrenaline re-uptake inh
ibitor, modulates the late exteroceptive suppression period (ES(2)) of
temporal muscle activity in chronic tension-type headache. ES(2) was
recorded with a previously evaluated method and assessed by a blinded
observer in 35 patients with chronic tension-type headache. Thereafter
, ES(2) was recorded in 27 of these patients during a double-blind, pl
acebo-controlled, 3-way crossover trial investigating the prophylactic
effect of amitriptyline, the selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitor
citalopram, and placebo. ES(2) duration was significantly shorter duri
ng treatment with amitriptyline than during placebo, P = 0.02, while E
S(2) duration only tended to be shorter during treatment with citalopr
am, P = 0.34. ES(2) was not significantly correlated to the prophylact
ic effect of amitriptyline or to a range of clinical and experimental
pain parameters. Our results demonstrate that amitriptyline reduces ES
(2) and indicate that ES(2) is modulated by serotonergic as well as no
radrenergic neuronal pathways.