Published in:
Open Access
01-06-2008 | Letter to the Editor
Epigenetics and pharmaco-epigenetics in the primary headaches
Author:
Pasquale Montagna
Published in:
The Journal of Headache and Pain
|
Issue 3/2008
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Excerpt
I wish to thank Dr. Schürks for his appreciative comments [
1] on my review published in the
Journal of Headache and Pain [
2]. This review was based on a presentation given at a master course on headache in Rome, (incompletely) summarizing evidence for genetic mechanisms in the primary headaches and briefly presenting our proposal of the primary headaches as integrated behaviours having an evolutionary meaning and pain as a signal of homeostatic unbalance. This novel view of the primary headaches with a discussion on the relevant imaging studies was better detailed elsewhere [
3], and represents an elaboration of precedent bio-behavioural theories of migraine [
4,
5]. Modelling the primary headaches as behavioural disorders helps to explain their important co-morbidities (to be really construed as intrinsic features of the diseases), and sets up also a framework useful for future genetic studies, since, as Schürks rightly emphasizes that it can accommodate those environmental aspects (lighting conditions, dietary factors and lifestyles, socio-economic status, etc. [
6,
7]) that are so important for pathogenesis. Thus, epigenetic mechanisms seem to be particularly interesting for migrainologists, whereas their importance is being increasingly recognized in psychiatric and developmental disorders of the nervous system. Epigenetic mechanisms have yet even to be taken into consideration in the primary headaches, even though some preliminary evidence may be gleaned by studies of twins raised together and apart from their infancy [
8]. While this study found that several putative risk factors (schooling, education, marital status, smoking status and alcohol consumption) showed no association with migraine with aura, this was a retrospective study and one that investigated situations mostly arising later in life [
8]. Epigenetic mechanisms can be more easily investigated prospectively in the setting of neonatal/paediatric medicine, for instance, by studying the child attachment patterns and psycho-social conditions and how they relate to the chance of developing migraine later in life. …