Link and colleagues (
45) have investigated several immunologic parameters in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and plasma of patients with chronic headache (of unspecified and undefined type). However, in these studies the headache patients were used as controls for patients with multiple sclerosis, and no healthy, normal controls were included. Accordingly, no qualitative conclusions regarding these observations can be drawn.
Nagasawa et al. (
51) found slightly higher serum levels of complement C3 and C4 in patients with muscle contraction headache compared with normal individuals. However, the patient group was a mean of 10 years older than the control group, and both C3 and C4 levels increased with age. Accordingly, the conclusion of Nasagawa et al. that inflammatory aspects are involved in muscle contraction headache is interesting but should be confirmed in a study with a matched control group.
The importance of connections between the immune and nervous systems is becoming increasingly clear, not the least in the field of pain. In a series of experiments, Christoph Stein et al. have provided evidence that
β-endorphin may be synthesized in immunocytes and, following stimulation by inflammatory mediators such as corticotropin-releasing hormone and interleukin-1, released into inflamed tissue. Here,
β-endorphin may bind to opioid receptors on nociceptive fibers and reduce nociception (
14). Three independent groups have measured decreased
β-endorphin concentrations in peripheral blood mononuclear cells in patients with episodic TTH during a headache-free period (
10,
44,
48). Although the results are premature in the sense that
β-endorphin was not characterized on the molecular level, these data are interesting in the light of development within the field. However, speculations about
β-endorphin concentrations in peripheral blood mononuclear cells reflecting central nervous system concentrations of the same substance (
44) have no support in scientific data (
3).