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Brain Advance Access originally published online on February 2, 2005
Brain 2005 128(4):940-947; doi:10.1093/brain/awh411
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© The Author (2005). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions{at}oupjournals.org

Hypothalamic stimulation in chronic cluster headache: a pilot study of efficacy and mode of action

J. Schoenen1,2, L. Di Clemente1, M. Vandenheede1, A. Fumal1,2, V. De Pasqua1, M. Mouchamps3, J.-M. Remacle3 and A. Maertens de Noordhout1

University Departments of 1 Neurology and 2 Neuroanatomy, University of Liège and 3 Department of Neurosurgery, CHR Citadelle, Liege, Belgium

Correspondence to: Professor Dr Jean Schoenen, Headache Research Unit, University Department of Neurology, CHR Citadelle, Bd du XIIème de Ligne, B-4000 Liège, Belgium E-mail: j.schoenen{at}ulg.ac.be

We enrolled six patients suffering from refractory chronic cluster headache in a pilot trial of neurostimulation of the ipsilateral ventroposterior hypothalamus using the stereotactic coordinates published previously. After the varying durations needed to determine optimal stimulation parameters and a mean follow-up of 14.5 months, the clinical outcome is excellent in three patients (two are pain-free; one has fewer than three attacks per month), but unsatisfactory in one patient, who only has had transient remissions. Mean voltage is 3.28 V, diplopia being the major factor limiting its increase. When the stimulator was switched off in one pain-free patient, attacks resumed after 3 months until it was turned on again. In one patient the implantation procedure had to be interrupted because of a panic attack with autonomic disturbances. Another patient died from an intracerebral haemorrhage that developed along the lead tract several hours after surgery; there were no other vascular changes on post-mortem examination. After 1 month, the hypothalamic stimulation induced resistance against the attack-triggering agent nitroglycerin and tended to increase pain thresholds at extracephalic, but not at cephalic, sites. It had no detectable effect on neurohypophyseal hormones or melatonin excretion. We conclude that hypothalamic stimulation has remarkable efficacy in most, but not all, patients with treatment-resistant chronic cluster headache. Its efficacy is not due to a simple analgesic effect or to hormonal changes. Intracerebral haemorrhage cannot be neglected in the risk evaluation of the procedure. Whether it might be more prevalent than in deep-brain stimulation for movement disorders remains to be determined.


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