Induction of more severe central sensitization in a medication overuse headache model mice through active ingestion of rizatriptan.

Journal: The Journal Of Headache And Pain
Published:
Abstract

Background: Medication overuse headache (MOH) is a secondary headache disorder arising from excessive use of acute analgesics in patients with primary headache. Current animal models that predominantly employ passive drug administration fail to recapitulate the hallmark feature of voluntary medication-seeking behaviour observed clinically. Therefore, we established a novel MOH mouse model with the active ingestion of rizatriptan (RIZ) to better simulate the clinical characteristics of MOH and explore changes in brain activation patterns.

Methods: C57BL/6 J mice received intraperitoneal injections of nitroglycerin (NTG, 10 mg/kg) every other day. During the feeding period, they were provided with two bottles-one containing an RIZ solution (0.02 mg/kg) and the other containing deuterium depleted water (DDW)-allowing for voluntary intake. The bottle containing the RIZ solution was marked with a fixed colour indicator at the nozzle. Behavioural assessments included mechanical allodynia (von Frey filaments), anxiety-like behaviours (elevated plus maze, EPM and open field test, OFT), and drug-seeking quantification. Quantitative data from c-Fos immunostaining across 25 specific brain regions were subjected to Z score normalization, followed by three-tiered computational analyses: 1) hierarchical clustering (complete linkage) to characterize activation patterns, 2) Pearson correlation analysis for functional connectivity mapping, and 3) graph-theoretical network analysis (Cytoscape 3.2.1) to identify hub regions and their topological relationships. The small molecule calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) receptor antagonist, rimegepant (100 mg/kg, i.p., 7 injections) was administered during the modelling period, and withdrawal of RIZ and NTG was applied after modelling to observe behavioural and histological changes.

Results: Chronic RIZ consumption exacerbated NTG-induced cutaneous allodynia, prolonged central sensitization, and increased anxiety-like behaviour. Rimegepant attenuated allodynia progression, whereas withdrawal of RIZ and NTG normalized pain thresholds. Network analysis identified the prelimbic cortex (PrL) and spinal trigeminal nucleus caudalis (SPVC) as hub nodes. The PrL exhibited extensive functional connectivity with addiction-related regions (the insular cortex, IC and nucleus accumbens), whereas the SPVC showed predominant connections with pain-processing areas.

Conclusions: This study pioneers an ethologically valid MOH model that reflects more severe central sensitization and recapitulates active medication-seeking behaviour. PrL-mediated addiction-like-behaviour pathways and SPVC-centred nociceptive processing may play roles in the development of MOH. These findings provide novel neuromodulation targets (PrL, IC, SPVC) for refractory MOH management.

Authors
Zhenjie Ma, Chenhao Li, Wenhao Bai, Wei Xie, Mingjie Zhang, Han Xiao, Cancan Chen, Yang Li, Wenwen Zhang, Deqi Zhai, Yingyuan Liu, Dengfa Zhao, Wenjing Tang, Zhao Dong, Ruozhuo Liu, Shengyuan Yu