Unilateral impairment of pupillary response to trigeminal nerve stimulation in cluster headache

Alessandri M, Campagnolo V, Sicuteri F, Fanciullacci M, Fusco B Pain 1989 ; 36:185-91

The pupillary constriction induced ipsilaterally by transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) of the infratrochlearnerve was measured, using an electronic pupillometer, in 26 episodic cluster headache (CH) and 15 migraine sufferers tested during an attack-free period and in 16 healthy controls. In controls, TENS gave rise to a miosis which was slow in onset and long-lasting in duration, and which was comparable to that mediated by tachykinins in animals. A similar miotic response was bilaterally observed in migraine patients and in CH patients examined during the inactive phase. In CH sufferers during the cluster period, TENS only elicited a normal pupillary constriction in the asymptomatic eye, whereas the resulting response in the symptomatic eye was markedly decreased. Although the exact mechanism underlying the dysfunction remains to be clarified, these results seem to indicate that ocular trigeminal pathways are involved in CH.

Inside SOTO–USA

17th Annual Clinical Symposium

May 12-14, 2016
New Orleans, Louisiana

8th Annual SOT Research Conference







May 13-14, 2016
New Orleans, Louisiana

Meet Dr. DeJarnette - Developer of SOT

Vist the wisdom, skill, and humor of Dr. DeJarnette the developer of Sacro Occipital Technique.

The History of Sacro Occipital Technique

Major Bertrand DeJarnette, DC, was a renowned inventor, engineer, osteopath, and chiropractor throughout his long and productive career.