Neurological sciences : official journal of the Italian Neurological Society and of the Italian Society of Clinical Neurophysiology
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Migraine is an episodic brain disorder that results in significant morbidity. Antiepileptic drugs (neuromodulators) are increasingly recommended for migraine prevention because of placebo-controlled double-blind trials that prove them effective. ⋯ Inhibition of trigeminocervical complex directly, or neurons that modulate sensory input, are also plausible mechanisms for the actions of neuromodulators in preventive therapy in migraine. Although it is unlikely that a single phenomenon serves as the only link between migraine and epilepsy, the neuronal hyperexcitability that may contribute to each condition may explain the effect of these drugs for both conditions.
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We examined 59 consecutive patients presenting between 1993 and 2006 at our centre diagnosed with headache associated with spontaneous intracranial hypotension syndrome (SIH). Thirty-six (61%) patients were women; the mean age was 47 years (range 20-68). Cerebral MRI with contrast confirmed SIH in all patients. ⋯ All SIH patients suffered from headache. Early recognition of SIH may avoid dangerous worsening due to delayed diagnosis. Orthostatic headache, the main symptom, suggests the diagnosis.
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Migraine patients may present altered values of the parameters related to their cerebral circulation. The non-invasive assessment of the autoregulation of such patients can be helpful in investigating the causes of migraine. We developed a joint analysis protocol based on transcranial Doppler (TCD) and near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) for assessing cerebral autoregulation. ⋯ Strong differences in the CBFV were observable during the BH task: migraineurs showed a smaller BH index than controls (0.83+/-0.55% vs. 1.29+/-0.71%; p<0.005) and a reduced increase of the oxy-Hb (migraineurs: 0.033+/-0.019 micromol/l/s; healthy: 0.055+/-0.037 micromol/l/s; p<0.01). Also, we found a different haemoglobin balancing during the BH phase between migraineurs and controls, revealing that migraineurs do not show a marked vasodilation as functional response to the CO(2) increase. We propose this joint analysis protocol to assess cerebral autoregulation of migraine patients, and suggest NIRS as a low-cost, easy, reliable and fast technique to deeply investigate cerebral coupling deregulations.
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About 60% of patients complain of cutaneous allodynia during migraine episodes, often in the periorbitary region of the pain side. Pre-clinical studies have shown that the underlying mechanism is sensitisation of primary nociceptors and central trigeminovascular neurons and that patients have a lower pain threshold for mechanical stimulation compared to controls. The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of allodynia during headache attacks in different forms of migraine. ⋯ Allodynia was a common complaint in migraineurs, being present in more than 40% patients of each group. A higher frequency was observed in MA and in CM patients. This observation may suggest that both frequency of attacks and presence of aura episodes may contribute to induce changes in neuronal activation threshold thought to sustain allodynia.
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Comparative Study
Application of ICHD-II and revised diagnostic criteria to patients with chronic daily headache.
The objective of this study was to evaluate how the criteria of the second edition of the International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD-II) and the revised criteria fit a sample of patients with chronic daily headache (CDH). One hundred and five patients with CDH in a tertiary headache centre were included. Headache was assessed using a semi-structured interview. ⋯ Seventy-six percent of patients were classified as MOH, 17% had CTTH and 6.7% had CM. The classification of CDH remains controversial. Alternative criteria for CM with and without medication overuse are discussed.