Sleep Clinical Trial
Official title:
Actigraphy and Nocturnal Heartrate Variability in Cluster Headache Patients
Cluster headache is one of the most painful headaches, characterized by recurring episodes of
unilateral, periorbital pain, which is accompanied by autonomic symptoms that seem to be of
both sympathetic and parasympathetic origin. The pathophysiology behind the condition is
largely unknown, but increasing evidence indicate that the hypothalamus plays a pivotal role.
The headache attacks come in clusters or bouts (hence the name) which last up to three
months, after which the headache disappears for at least one month. 10-15% have chronic
cluster headache. During attacks, the patients have cranial sympathetic hypoactivity and
parasympathetic hyperactivity, whereas they have cranial parasympathetic hypoactivity during
remission phase. There is an emerging hypothesis that headache attacks are elicited in a
state of autonomic hypoarousability, which is also supported by the fact that most cluster
attacks occur during the night, when the patients are sleeping.
The aim in this project is to study the intercept between the sleep-wake cycle, autonomic
tone and the occurrence of headache attacks, by using actigraphy, heart-rate variability and
pupillometry. All these methods are well validated, and frequently used in studies on sleep
and autonomic function. The study design is that of a case-control model where 15 cluster
headache patients will undergo pupillometry, before wearing the actigraph and heart-rate
variability-monitor for two weeks, once in cluster bout and once in remission phase. The
actigraphy will register nocturnal movement and sleep quality, and headache attacks will be
registered by pressing a button on the actigraph. The pupillometry measures pupillary
constriction and dilation in response to light, a reflex that is controlled by the autonomic
nervous system. The heart-rate variability monitors fluctuations in the heart rate which
reflects the sympathovagal balance of cardiac control. All participants will fill out the
Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index before and after registration. In addition, 15 healthy
controls will undergo one session of the same examinations. The results of the study will
give valuable insight to the pathophysiology of a condition that is very painful and has
great impact on the patients' quality of life, and also add knowledge to the relation between
headache, sleep and the autonomic nervous system.
Cluster headache (CH) is a primary headache in which recurring episodes of unilateral,
periorbital pain is accompanied by unilateral autonomic symptoms such as tearing,
conjunctival injection, nasal congestion or rhinorrhea, miosis and ptosis. Headache attacks
last from 15 to 180 minutes, and patients may have up to eight attacks each day. Most attacks
occur at night between midnight and 04 a.m. Headache attacks come in recurring bouts lasting
up to three months, after which the headache disappears for at least one month. 10-15% of
patients have chronic cluster headache, meaning that there are no pauses between bouts. The
condition has a prevalence of about 0.2% and affects men 3-4 times more often than women.
The combination of unilateral headache and autonomic symptoms makes CH an interesting
disorder to study in view of headache pathophysiology. Increasing amounts of evidence points
at the hypothalamus as the locus in quo for CH pathophysiology. During attacks, the autonomic
symptoms seem to be caused both by a hypofunction of sympathetic activity (miosis and
ptosis), and a hyperfunction of parasympathetic activity (conjunctival injection, tearing and
nasal congestion). Physiological studies seem to imply that patients during bouts have an
upregulated parasympathetic activity caused by activation of the trigemino-parasympathetic
reflex and a downregulated sympathetic tone, while they outside of bouts have a downregulated
parasympathetic tone. Studying the autonomous nervous system in cluster headache patients is
difficult, as they usually have headaches only a few months during the year and the attacks
are quite short lasting, but excruciating painful when they occur, leaving the patients
restless and with an urge to move about. This makes it difficult to study what actually
happens during the painful phase. Thus, finding new ways to study the autonomic nervous
system in these patients during the various stages of their disease is very important.
In addition to autonomic dysfunction, sleep disturbances are frequent and well documented in
CH patients. Sleep is often problematic in all headaches, but CH patients seem to have a high
prevalence of insomnia even when compared to other headache populations. This is not merely a
result of the recurring nocturnal headaches, as CH patients have significantly reduced sleep
quality compared to controls even one year after last headache attack. The documentation
mostly consist of studies using well validated questionnaires such as the Pittsburgh Sleep
Quality Index (PSQI) or diagnostic criteria such as the DSM IV. Only one major study have
assessed sleep quality in cluster headache using quantitative methods such as
polysomnography. In this study, the authors found that cluster headache patients in headache
bout had a reduced percentage of REM sleep, longer REM latency and fewer arousals compared to
healthy controls. There was no temporal relationship between headache attacks and specific
sleep stages. Sleep is the single most important trigger for attacks in cluster headache, and
most attacks occur during the late night or early morning hours.
We know that the balance between sympathetic and parasympathetic tone differ between REM and
NREM-sleep stages in healthy individuals, and that there is a transient decrease in
sympathetic tone during the night, which is reflected in a period of reduced heart rate and
blood pressure. This "dipping" coincides with the increased occurrence of cluster attacks,
and fits well into the emerging theory that cluster headache attacks is elicited in a state
of hypoarousability, or reduced sympathetic tone. Thus, sleep disturbances are, together with
autonomic dysfunction, an integral part of CH pathophysiology, and further studies are needed
to elucidate the association between sleep, autonomic dysfunction and headache attacks.
The aim of this study is to assess sleep quality and autonomic tone in CH patients inside and
outside of headache bouts, compared to healthy controls. Inside of bouts, the investigators
will assess how the occurrence of headache attacks are related to autonomic tone. The data
will be gathered by using actigraphy, pupillometry and heart-rate variability, all well
validated research tools. In addition, all participators will fill out the PSQI reporting
subjective sleep quality.
Pupillometry: The pupillary response to light is conducted by the autonomous nervous system.
In short, constriction of the pupil is a parasympathetic response, and pupillary redilation a
sympathetic response. By measuring the velocity of constricting and dilating the pupil, you
get a good view of the balance between the two. The measurements are made in 1 lux ambient
darkness with a pupillometer that consists of a infra-red camera that films the pupil as it
responds to a small light flash, and measures the time the pupil takes to contract and
redilate again.
Heart-rate variability: Heart-rate variability (HRV) is an indirect, non-invasive way of
measuring the autonomic nervous system activity, with contributions from both the sympathetic
and parasympathetic nervous systems. Frequency-specific fluctuations in the heart rate are
assessed with power spectrum analysis. The high frequency component (HF: 0.15-0.4 Hz)
reflects vagal control, whereas the low frequency component (LF: 0.04-0.15) reflects
sympathetic control. The LF/HF ratio reflects sympathovagal balance. Reduced Heart-rate
variability has been associated to increased mortality in patients with myocardial infarction
and heart failure. A simple computer placed on the forearm combined with a monitor placed on
the chest, giving minimal discomfort to the patient, may now measure heart rate variability.
Actigraphy: Polysomnography is the gold standard of sleep assessment, but is quite an
extensive and resource intensive method. In later years, new technology has made actigraphy a
reliable and easy way to measure sleep in a less invasive manner. An actigraph is a small,
wrist-watch-sized device that monitors movement by using an accelerometer that tracks motion
and creates a graph. In addition, a button can be pushed to mark events such as bedtime or
waketime. Actigraphs are widely used to study sleep-wake cycles and circadian rhythms.
Several studies have compared actigraphy to polysomnography in the assessment of e.g.
insomnia and other sleep disturbances, and found it to be a valid and cost-effective
alternative.
The Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index: There are several self-report questionnaires available
measuring subjective sleep quality, and the Pittsburgh sleep quality index is one of the best
validated and widely used alternatives. PSQI measures retrospective subjective sleep quality
and disturbances during the last month.
The study will be conducted as a case-control study, comparing patients to healthy controls,
but it will also compare patients to themselves in and out of headache bouts. The patients
will undergo pupillometry, actigraphy and HRV registration twice: once in remission phase,
and once in headache phase. Pupillometry will be conducted at the out-patient clinic. Here,
the participants will also receive their actigraph and HRV-monitor. Each registration will
last two weeks, where the actigraph, formed as a watch, is placed on the patient's wrist for
recording of movement during day and night, and a heart rate monitor formed as a belt records
heart rate variability. Software is available to interpret the data making it possible to
measure sleep and vasoactive tone. After the two weeks are over, the patients will fill out
the PSQI, reporting the subjective sleep quality, which may be compared to the registrations
from the actigraph. To register in headache phase, the patients must be willing to contact
the study researchers and give notice when the bout has begun, so that they may come and
receive the actigraph. The patients will be asked to mark the occurrence of attacks during
the registration by pressing a button on the actigraph.
The healthy controls will undergo pupillometry, actigraphy and HRV monitoring only once, and
fill out the PSQI after registration. The PSQI also registers the use of sleeping pills,
which may be used in both patients and controls. For each two weeks registration, the average
number of hours with daylight will be noted, as this may influence the sleep quality of the
patients. These data will be given from the Norwegian Meteorological Institute.
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