Cephalalgia : an international journal of headache
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Exteroceptive suppression of temporalis muscle activity was proposed by Schoenen and co-workers in 1987 as a tool in headache diagnosis and research. Their finding of a decreased or abolished second silent period (ES2) in chronic tension-type headache sufferers has been confirmed by several independent laboratories during the last five years. ⋯ The pathophysiological concept of muscle contraction in tension-type headache has been challenged by studies using temporalis silent periods. The exteroceptive suppression of temporalis muscle activity points unequivocally towards a central pathogenetic mechanism, although it remains unclear whether the abnormalities of temporalis ES2 represent the primary dysfunction or a secondary phenomenon in chronic tension-type headache.
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The aim of this study was to compare the habituation kinetics of contingent negative variation (CNV) between 12 migraineurs without aura and matched healthy controls. CNV was studied with a 3 sec interval between the warning stimulus (WS) and the imperative stimulus (IS). The data from (a) the total interval (WS-IS), (b) early component, and (c) late component were analyzed. ⋯ When sequential blocks of four trials were analyzed, the most significant finding in migraineurs was lack of habituation of the early CNV component. The present study indicates that a delayed habituation, rather than a general increased cortical activity, is responsible for the CNV abnormalities in migraine without aura. We suggest that migraineurs between attacks not only have a cortical hyperexcitability, but also a lack of cortical inhibition causing delayed habituation.