| Literature DB >> 27084886 |
Antonio Russo1,2,3, Fabrizio Esposito4, Francesca Conte1, Michele Fratello1,4, Giuseppina Caiazzo2, Laura Marcuccio1, Alfonso Giordano1,2, Gioacchino Tedeschi1,2,3, Alessandro Tessitore1,2.
Abstract
Objective A prospective clinical imaging study has been conducted to investigate pain processing functional pathways during trigeminal heat stimulation (THS) in patients with migraine without aura experiencing ictal cutaneous allodynia (CA) (MwoA CA+). Methods Using whole-brain BOLD-fMRI, functional response to THS at three different intensities (41°, 51° and 53℃) was investigated interictally in 20 adult MwoA CA+ patients compared with 20 MwoA patients without ictal CA (MwoA CA-) and 20 healthy controls (HCs). Secondary analyses evaluated associations between BOLD signal change and clinical features of migraine. Results During moderate-noxious THS (51℃), we observed a significantly greater activation in (a) the anterior cingulate cortex in MwoA CA+ patients compared to HCs and (b) the middle frontal gyrus in MwoA CA+ patients compared to both MwoA CA- patients and HCs. Furthermore, during high-noxious THS (53℃) a significantly decreased activation in the secondary somatosensory cortices was observed in (a) MwoA CA- patients compared to both MwoA CA+ patients and HCs and (b) MwoA CA+ patients compared to HCs. CA severity was positively correlated with the secondary somatosensory cortices activation. Conclusions Our findings suggest that CA may be subtended by both a dysfunctional analgesic compensatory mechanism and an abnormal internal representation of pain in migraine patients.Entities:
Keywords: Migraine; allodynia; fMRI; trigeminal stimulation; volumetric MRI
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27084886 DOI: 10.1177/0333102416644969
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cephalalgia ISSN: 0333-1024 Impact factor: 6.292