| Literature DB >> 30116215 |
Antonio Russo1,2, Gianluca Coppola3, Francesco Pierelli4,5, Vincenzo Parisi3, Marcello Silvestro1, Alessandro Tessitore1,2, Gioacchino Tedeschi1,2,6.
Abstract
Background: It is well-known that both inter- and intra-individual differences exist in the perception of pain; this is especially true in migraine, an elusive pain disorder of the head. Although electrophysiology and neuroimaging techniques have greatly contributed to a better understanding of the mechanisms involved in migraine during recent decades, the exact characteristics of pain threshold and pain intensity perception remain to be determined, and continue to be a matter of debate. Objective: The aim of this review is to provide a comprehensive overview of clinical, electrophysiological, and functional neuroimaging studies investigating changes during various phases of the so-called "migraine cycle" and in different migraine phenotypes, using pain threshold and pain intensity perception assessments.Entities:
Keywords: headache; migraine; pain intensity perception; pain measurement; pain processing; pain threshold; temporal summation
Year: 2018 PMID: 30116215 PMCID: PMC6082953 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2018.00576
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Pain threshold findings from experimental studies during noxious stimulation in migraine patients.
| Sand et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients ( | Preictal | Heat and cold | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | Subclinical reduced PT compared to baseline |
| Burstein et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients with ( | Ictal and interictal | Heat, cold and pressure | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | Reduced PT in facial skin (79%) and forearm (67%). The authors found a positive correlation between frequency of headache and extension of low PT area |
| Burstein et al. ( | One episodic migraine patient with CA | Ictal and interictal | Heat, cold, mechanical and pressure | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | Progressive lowering of PT in the facial skin and of ipsilateral forearm skin during the pain acme |
| Uglem et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients ( | Ictal and interictal | Heat and cold | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | Reduced cold PT in the ictal phase compared to the interictal, preictal and postictal phases. No differences in heat PT |
| De Tommaso et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients ( | Interictal and ictal | CO2-laser | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | Reduced PT during the migraine attack compared with baseline and related with duration of illness |
| Engstrøm et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients with and without aura ( | Interictal phase | Heat, cold and pressure | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | Lower thermal PT in migraine patients compared to HC. Lower PT seems related to increased sleep pressure |
| Schwedt et al. ( | Chronic and episodic migraine patients ( | Interictal phase | Heat | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | Lower heat PT in migraine patients compared to HC |
| Schoenen et al. ( | Episodic female migraine patients without aura ( | Interictal phase | Pressure | Trigeminal | Lower forehead PT in migraine patients compared to HC |
| Sandrini et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients without aura ( | Interictal phase | Electrical | Trigeminal (cornea) | Lower corneal pain thresholds in migraine patients compared to HC; the lowest values were observed on the symptomatic side of unilateral migraine patients |
| Fernández-de-Las-Peñas et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients with unilateral pain ( | Interictal phase | Pressure | Trigeminal (temporalis and trapezius muscles) | Lower pressure PT on the symptomatic side as compared with the non-symptomatic side and to either side in controls; no significant differences between the non-symptomatic side and HC |
| Fernández-de-las-Peñas et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients ( | Interictal phase | Pressure | Trigeminal (nine points of the temporalis muscle) | Lower pressure PT than HC. Lower PPT in the center compared with the posterior part of the muscle |
| Fernández-de-las-Peñas et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients ( | Interictal phase | Pressure | Trapezius muscle (eleven points of the trapezius muscle) | Lower pressure PT levels in the trapezius muscle region compared with HC |
| Zappaterra et al. ( | Chronic ( | Interictal phase | Pressure | Trigeminal (temple, cheekbone, and cervical areas) | Lower pressure PT in chronic migraine patients and medications overuse; no difference of mechanical PT in episodic migraine patients |
| Grossi et al. ( | Chronic ( | Interictal phase | Pressure | Trigeminal (frontalis, temporalis, masseter) and extratrigeminal (trapezius and sternocleidomastoid) | Decreased PPT in women with migraine relative to HC; no significant PPT values differences between episodic migraine patients and chronic migraine patients |
| Schwedt et al. ( | Chronic ( | Interictal phase | Heat, cold and pressure | Trigeminal (forehead) and extratrigeminal (ventral forearms) | Lower thermal PT in both chronic and episodic migraine patients compared to HC; no difference in the mechanical PT |
| Florencio et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients ( | Interictal phase | Pressure | Trigeminal (sternocleidomastoid, suboccipital, trapezius, scalene) | Lower pressure PT in all muscles compared with controls |
| Palacios-Ceña et al. ( | Chronic ( | Interictal phase | Pressure | Trigeminal (temporalis muscle), extratrigeminal (second metacarpal, tibialis anterior muscle) | Lower pressure PT over trigeminal and extra-trigeminal points |
| Bovim ( | Episodic migraine patients with and without aura ( | Interictal phase | Pressure | Trigeminal twenty-two specified points (11 on each side of the head) | No significant side-to-side differences in the pressure PT in patients with strict unilateral migraine, between migraine patients and HC |
| Göbel et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients with migraine without aura ( | Interictal phase | Pressure | Trigeminal | No significant differences in pain sensitivity of pericranial musculature |
| Bishop et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients with migraine without aura ( | Interictal phase | Cold | Extratrigeminal (non-dominant hand) | No significant difference in the cold pressor test |
| Weissman-Fogel et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients with and without aura ( | Interictal phase | Heat and electric | Trigeminal (periorbital area) and extratrigeminal (forearm) | No significant differences in mean heat, mechanical, and electrical PT between migraineurs and controls |
| Katsarava et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients ( | Ictal and interictal phase | Electric (nociceptive blink reflex) | Trigeminal | |
| Ayzenberg et al. ( | Chronic ( | Electric (nociceptive blink reflex) | Trigeminal (periorbital area) and extratrigeminal (hand) | No significant differences between HC and patients with episodic migraine and depression without headache | |
| Buchgreitz et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients ( | Interictal phase | Pressure | Trigeminal (dorsum of the second finger) and extratrigeminal (anterior part of the temporal muscle) | No significance differences in pressure PT |
| Coppola et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients without aura ( | Interictal phase | Electric (nociceptive blink reflex) | Trigeminal (supraorbital area) and extratrigeminal (index finger) | No significant differences between migraine patients and HC for pain threshold |
| Gierse-Plogmeier et al. ( | Episodic female migraine patients with ( | Interictal phase | Electrical | Trigeminal (masseter region) and extratrigeminal (tibial region) | No differences respect to pure sensory and pain electric thresholds neither for the peripheral nor for the trigeminal stimulation |
| Perrotta et al. ( | Patients with MOH ( | Interictal phase | Cold | Extratrigeminal | Significantly reduced mean electric PT in the MOH patients (both bWT and aWT) compared with HC; and in the MOH patients bWT compared with both the MOH patients aWT and the EM patients. |
| Teepker et al. ( | Episodic female migraine patients with and without aura ( | Interictal phase | Heat, cold, pressure and electrical | Extratrigeminal | No significant differences in PT; no relationship between PT and oral contraceptives assumption |
| Zohsel et al. ( | Children affected by migraine with and without aura ( | Interictal phase | Heat, pressure | Trigeminal (upper cheek) and extratrigeminal (thenar eminence) | Heat PT was not significantly different between the two groups. However, the child migraineurs showed significantly lower mechanical PT |
| De Tommaso et al. ( | Children affected by migraine without aura ( | Interictal phase | Laser | Trigeminal (supraorbital area) and extratrigeminal (hand) | Laser PT was significantly reduced in child migraineurs compared to HC at the hand level, but this difference was not significant at the trigeminal site |
| Ferracini et al. ( | Children affected by migraine without aura ( | Interictal phase | Pressure | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | The pressure PT did not differ between children with migraine and children without headache; |
| Anttila et al. ( | Children affected by migraine without aura ( | Interictal phase | Pressure | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal (seven pericranial and neck-shoulder tender points) | The mean pressure PT did not differ among the groups |
| Metsahonkala et al. ( | Children affected by migraine without aura ( | Interictal phase | Pressure | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal (seven cephalic and three extracephalic points) | The mean pressure PT did not differ among the groups of the study |
| Uthaikhup et al. ( | Elders affected by migraine without aura ( | Interictal phase | Heat, cold, and pressure | Trigeminal (forehead and upper neck) and extratrigeminal (tibialis anterior) | No significant differences between the headache groups and HC in pressure and cold PT |
| Cooke et al. ( | Chronic migraine female patients ( | Interictal phase | Pressure | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | The pressure PT was significantly lower in migraine patients than in HC subjects for the 1st and 2nd division of the trigeminal nerve |
| Kitaj and Klink ( | Episodic migraine patients ( | Interictal phase | Heat, cold, mechanical, and pressure | Trigeminal (forehead, maxillae) and extratrigeminal (C4 dermatome, and forearms) | Significantly lower pain thresholds in patients with transformed migraine compared to episodic migraine patients |
| De Tommaso et al. ( | Chronic migraine patients ( | Interictal phase | CO2-laser thermalstimulation | Trigeminal (face) and extratrigeminal (hand) | No significant differences in PT at both the hand and the face between the three groups |
| De Tommaso et al. ( | Chronic migraine patients ( | Interictal phase | CO2-laser pulses | Trigeminal | No significant differences in the PT; prevalent activation of the rostral portion of the ACC in patients with chronic migraine |
| De Tommaso et al. ( | Chronic migraine patients ( | Interictal phase | CO2-laser | Extratrigeminal | No significant differences in the PT; different modulation of bilateral parietal cortical areas and superior frontal and cingulate girus induced by different virtual reality in patients with CM compared to HC |
| Ferraro et al. ( | Patients with MOH ( | Interictal phase | Laser | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | No significant differences in the PT; deficient habituation of the vertex N2/P2 complex partly restored after successful treatment of MOH |
CA, cutaneous allodynia; HCs, healthy controls; MOH, medication overuse headache; PT, pain threshold.
Perceived pain intensity findings from experimental studies using pain-related evoked potentials and neuroimaging during noxious stimulation in migraine patients.
| Moulton et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients with and without aura experiencing CA ( | Ictal and interictal | Pain PT + 1°C Heat | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | No significant between ictal and interictal PPIs |
| Stankewitz et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients ( | Pre-ictal, ictal, and interictal | Gaseous ammonia | Trigeminal | No significant between groups PPIs differences |
| Stankewitz et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients ( | Ictal and interictal | Gaseous ammonia | Trigeminal | No significant between groups PPIs differences |
| Schulte and May ( | One episodic migraine with aura patient | Pre-ictal, ictal, and interictal | Gaseous ammonia | Trigeminal | Increased PPI during the ictal phase compared with pre-ictal and interictal phases |
| De Tommaso et al. ( | Migraine without aura patients ( | Interictal | CO2 laser stimulation | Trigeminal | No significant baseline between groups PPI differences. A greater PPI in response to laser stimulation has been demonstrated in migraine patients compared to HC after capsaicin application |
| De Tommaso et al. ( | Migraine without aura patients ( | Interictal | CO2 laser stimulation | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | No significant between groups PPI differences, during warning stimulus |
| De Tommaso et al. ( | Migraine without aura patients ( | Interictal | CO2 laser stimulation | Trigeminal | PPI in response to laser stimulations non-significantly declined across repetitions in migraine patients, while was significantly reduced in HC |
| De Tommaso et al. ( | Migraine without aura patients ( | Interictal | CO2 laser stimulation | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | No significant baseline between groups PPI differences. A greater PPI in response to laser stimulation has been demonstrated in migraine patients compared to HC after capsaicin application |
| De Tommaso et al. ( | Migraine without aura patients ( | Interictal | CO2 laser stimulation | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | No significant between groups PPI differences, during discrimination and arithmetic tasks |
| Moulton et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients experiencing CA ( | Interictal | 41°C innocuous heat stimulus and PT+1°C | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | No significant between groups PPI differences |
| De Tommaso et al. ( | Migraine without aura female patients during the pre-menstrual and late luteal phases ( | Interictal | CO2 laser stimulation | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | No significant between groups PPI differences, during the pre-menstrual phase |
| De Tommaso et al. ( | Migraine without aura patients ( | Interictal | CO2 laser stimulation | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | No significant between groups PPI differences, during affective picture viewing |
| De Tommaso et al. ( | Migraine without aura patients ( | Interictal | CO2 laser stimulation | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | No significant between groups PPI differences, after excitability enhancers repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation |
| Di Clemente et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients with and without aura ( | Interictal | Nd-YAP laser stimulation | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | No significant between groups PPI differences |
| Ferraro et al. ( | Medication overuse headache patients ( | Interictal | CO2 laser stimulation | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | They found that PPI to laser stimuli significantly showed delayed habituation in patients, while after treatment, non-responders (true CM patients) showed lack of habituation in comparison to both HC and responders |
| Russo et al. ( | Migraine patients ( | Interictal | 41°C innocuous, 51°C moderate and 53°C high-noxious heat stimuli | Trigeminal | No significant between groups PPI differences |
| Schwedt et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients with and without aura ( | Interictal | Suprathreshold heat stimulus | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | No significant between groups PPI differences |
| Beese et al. ( | Migraine patients ( | Interictal | 51°C heat stimulus | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | No significant between groups PPI differences |
| De Tommaso et al. ( | Migraine without aura patients ( | Interictal | CO2 laser stimulation | Extratrigeminal | Higher baseline laser PPI in migraine than HC |
| Mathur et al. ( | Migraine patients ( | Interictal | Thermal | Extratrigeminal | Pain ratings were higher for patients than HC in response to heat stimuli of moderate intensity |
| Vecchio et al. ( | Migraine without aura patients ( | Interictal | CO2 laser stimulation | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | Higher baseline laser PPI in migraine than HC. PPI values did not change after excitability enhancers direct current stimulation |
| Russo et al. ( | Migraine patients not experiencing ictal CA ( | Interictal | 41°C innocuous, 51°C moderate and 53°C high-noxious heat stimuli | Trigeminal | Migraine patients with and without CA showed similar PPI values in comparison with HCs |
| Russo et al. ( | Migraine patients not experiencing CA ( | Interictal | 41°C innocuous, 51°C moderate and 53°C high-noxious heat stimuli | Trigeminal | Migraine patients with and without CA showed PPI values comparable to that of migraine with aura patients and HCs |
HCs, healthy controls; PPI, pain perception intensity.
Perceived pain intensity findings from experimental studies during heat, cold, pressure, or electrical noxious stimulation in migraine patients.
| Burstein et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients with ( | Ictal and interictal | Heat and cold | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | Higher PPI values during ictal, compared to interictal, period |
| Burstein et al. ( | One episodic migraine patient with CA | Ictal and interictal | Heat, cold and pressure | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | Higher PPI values during ictal, compared to interictal, period |
| Uglem et al. ( | Episodic migraine patients ( | Pre-ictal, ictal, post-ictal, and interictal | Heat and cold | Trigeminal | Interictal linear increase of PPI approaching to the next migraine attack, followed by an abrupt pre-ictal PPI decrease, and a subsequent ictal PPI increase. |
| Weissman-Fogel ( | Migraine patients ( | Interictal | Heat, electrical and mechanical | Trigeminal and extratrigeminal | Heat PPI values did not differ from those of HCs; whereas electrical and mechanical PPI to phasic stimulations increased in migraine patients when compared with HCs |
| Gierse-Plogmeier et al. ( | Migraine with ( | Interictal | Electrical and cold | Trigeminal | Increased interictal PPI with a positive correlation between the PPI and migraine frequency |
HCs, healthy controls; PPI,pain perception intensity.