Literature DB >> 12804664

Evoked potentials and transcranial magnetic stimulation in migraine: published data and viewpoint on their pathophysiologic significance.

Jean Schoenen1, Anna Ambrosini, Peter S Sándor, Alain Maertens de Noordhout.   

Abstract

Migraine is a disorder in which central nervous sytem dysfunction might play a pivotal role. Electroneurophysiology seems thus particularly suited to study its pathophysiology. We have extensively reviewed evoked potential and transcranial magnetic stimulation studies performed in migraineurs in order to identify their pathophysiologic significance. Publications available to us were completed by a Medline search. Retrieved and personal data were compared with respect to methodology and interpreted according to present knowledge on cortical information processing. Results are in part contradictory which appears to be method-, patient- and disease- related. Nonetheless, both evoked potential and transcranial magnetic stimulation studies demonstrate that the cerebral cortex, and possibly subcortical structures, are dysfunctioning interictally in both migraine with and without aura. These electrophysiologic abnormalities tend to normalise just before and during an attack and some of them seem to have a clear familial and predisposing character. Besides the studies of magnetophosphenes which have yielded contrasting results, chiefly because the method is not sufficiently reliable, most recent electrophysiologic investigations of cortical activities in migraine favour deficient habituation and decreased preactivation cortical excitability as the predominant interictal dysfunctions. We propose that the former is a consequence of the latter and that it could favour both interictal cognitive disturbances as well as a cerebral metabolic disequilibrium that may play a role in migraine pathogenesis. To summarize, electrophysiologic studies demonstrate in migraine between attacks a cortical, and possibly subcortical, dysfunction of which the hallmark is deficient habituation.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12804664     DOI: 10.1016/s1388-2457(03)00024-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Neurophysiol        ISSN: 1388-2457            Impact factor:   3.708


  38 in total

Review 1.  Clinical relevance of cortical spreading depression in neurological disorders: migraine, malignant stroke, subarachnoid and intracranial hemorrhage, and traumatic brain injury.

Authors:  Martin Lauritzen; Jens Peter Dreier; Martin Fabricius; Jed A Hartings; Rudolf Graf; Anthony John Strong
Journal:  J Cereb Blood Flow Metab       Date:  2010-11-03       Impact factor: 6.200

Review 2.  Migraine: multiple processes, complex pathophysiology.

Authors:  Rami Burstein; Rodrigo Noseda; David Borsook
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2015-04-29       Impact factor: 6.167

3.  Dynamic tilt thresholds are reduced in vestibular migraine.

Authors:  Richard F Lewis; Adrian J Priesol; Keyvan Nicoucar; Koeun Lim; Daniel M Merfeld
Journal:  J Vestib Res       Date:  2011       Impact factor: 2.435

4.  Spatial frequency differentially affects habituation in migraineurs: a steady-state visual-evoked potential study.

Authors:  Koichi Shibata; Kiyomi Yamane; Yoshiko Nishimura; Hiromi Kondo; Kuniaki Otuka
Journal:  Doc Ophthalmol       Date:  2011-07-19       Impact factor: 2.379

5.  The locus of flicker adaptation in the migraine visual system: a dichoptic study.

Authors:  Michel Thabet; Frances Wilkinson; Hugh R Wilson; Olivera Karanovic
Journal:  Cephalalgia       Date:  2012-11-12       Impact factor: 6.292

6.  [Duration of migraine disease correlates with amplitude and habituation of event-related potentials].

Authors:  P Kropp; U Linstedt; W-D Gerber
Journal:  Schmerz       Date:  2005-11       Impact factor: 1.107

7.  Startle reactivity in children at risk for migraine.

Authors:  Roman Duncko; Lihong Cui; Jeffrey Hille; Christian Grillon; Kathleen R Merikangas
Journal:  Clin Neurophysiol       Date:  2008-10-31       Impact factor: 3.708

Review 8.  Headache frontiers: using magnetoencephalography to investigate pathophysiology of chronic migraine.

Authors:  Wei-Ta Chen; Yung-Yang Lin; Shuu-Jiun Wang
Journal:  Curr Pain Headache Rep       Date:  2013-01

9.  Developmental changes of the contingent negative variation in migraine and healthy children.

Authors:  Michael Siniatchkin; Anne Jonas; Huelya Baki; Andreas van Baalen; Wolf-Dieter Gerber; Ulrich Stephani
Journal:  J Headache Pain       Date:  2009-12-15       Impact factor: 7.277

Review 10.  A migraine variant with abdominal colic and Alice in Wonderland syndrome: a case report and review.

Authors:  Sherifa A Hamed
Journal:  BMC Neurol       Date:  2010-01-06       Impact factor: 2.474

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