Medical Hypotheses
Volume 73, Issue 4 , Pages 561-563, October 2009

Headache associated with visceral disorders is “parasympathetic referred pain”

  • Dong-Gyun Han

      Affiliations

    • Department of Neurology, DaeJeon HanKook Hospital, 496-15 SungNam 2 Dong, DaeJeon, ChungCheongNam-Do 300-709, South Korea
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +82 42 606 1130; fax: +82 42 606 1900.
  • ,
  • Chang-Ju Lee

      Affiliations

    • Department of Neurosurgery, DaeJeon HanKook Hospital, 496-15 SungNam 2 Dong, DaeJeon, ChungCheongNam-Do 300-709, South Korea

Received 7 May 2009; accepted 12 May 2009. published online 29 June 2009.

Summary 

Referred pain from visceral organs tends to be expressed on the specific area of body surface, called as Head’s zone. Although it is well known that sympathetic referred pains of viscera appear on the body trunk, the fact that parasympathetic referred pains exist and are expressed on the head, sacrum and posterior thigh is not appreciated properly. Functional gastrointestinal diseases accompany frequently headache, and cyclic vomiting and recurrent abdominal pains in childhood progress to migraine later. Such clinical observations on relationship between headache and viscera suggest that longstanding disease processes of viscera could induce central sensitization of trigeminocervical nuclear complex, and express “parasympathetic referred pain” on the head, like sympathetic referred pain on the body trunk, that is headache.

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PII: S0306-9877(09)00407-1

doi:10.1016/j.mehy.2009.05.047

Medical Hypotheses
Volume 73, Issue 4 , Pages 561-563, October 2009