We report a 58-year-old woman with long-standing migraine who developed a pattern of weekend headaches which occurred only while staying at her Connecticut vacation home The headaches promptly responded to sumatriptan. Investigation revealed a high carbon monoxide level in her home due to a defective furnace. Replacing the furnace eliminated the headaches. This case highlights the importance of searching for secondary causes of headache even in patients responsive to sumatriptan. It also suggests that carbon monoxide may trigger headaches mediated by trigeminovascular inflammation.Key words: migraine, sumatriptan, carbon monoxide
Abbreviations:COHb carboxyhemoglobin, cGMP cyclic guanidine monophosphate, NTG nitroglycerin (Headache 1997;37:392-395) Sumatriptan, a selective 5-HT 1D/B agonist, is believed to relieve the pain of migraine by blocking release of neuropeptides from trigeminal nerve endings, through a direct action on blood vessels or both. 1,2 In addition to its benefits in migraine human and animal research suggest that sumatriptan may also relieve head pain secondary to meningitis, subarachnoid hemorrhage, and other serious causes. 2,3 Herein we report a woman with migrainelike headaches triggered by carbon monoxide and relieved by sumatriptan.
CASE HISTORYA 58-year-old woman had a 25-year history of occasional, unilateral, episodic headaches accompanied by nausea and vomiting. One year prior to presentation, her headaches increased in frequency during weekends spent at her second home in Connecticut. These headaches typically began with a prodrome of nasal warmth followed by a right-or left-sided occipital pain that usually radiated to the ipsilateral retro-orbital area and rapidly became completely incapacitating. Headaches were associated with nausea, vomiting, photophobia, and phonophobia. There were no identifiable headache triggers other than residing at her Connecticut home. Specifically, headaches were not associated with changes in her sleep schedule or diet, nor with patterns of caffeine or alcohol consumption.The patient was often awakened by headache in the early hours of Saturday morning on winter weekends spent in Connecticut. A butalbital combination product did not provide adequate relief. Sumatriptan, 6 mg subcutaneously, brought complete relief of pain within 45 minutes and restoration of the ability to function normally at 1 hour. Headaches often recurred 12 to 24 hours after taking sumatriptan. These headaches responded to a second dose of sumatriptan. At the time of her initial consultation, she had successfully treated over 50 attacks with sumatriptan. Family history was remarkable for migraine in a brother. Her husband did not develop headaches during the weekends they spent together. Her past medical history is remarkable for two episodes of retinal vein thrombosis more than 30 years ago. She also had a history of borderline glaucoma.Diagnostic workup elsewhere included chest roentgenograms and CT of the head and sinuses; these studies were unremarkable. Tests for antiphosp...