| Literature DB >> 31035929 |
Gianluca Coppola1, Cherubino Di Lorenzo2, Vincenzo Parisi3, Marco Lisicki4, Mariano Serrao1, Francesco Pierelli1,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this review is to provide a comprehensive overview of the findings of clinical electrophysiology studies aimed to investigate changes in information processing of migraine with aura patients. MAIN BODY: Abnormalities in alpha rhythm power and symmetry, the presence of slowing, and increased information flow in a wide range of frequency bands often characterize the spontaneous EEG activity of MA. Higher grand-average cortical response amplitudes, an increased interhemispheric response asymmetry, and lack of amplitude habituation were less consistently demonstrated in response to any kind of sensory stimulation in MA patients. Studies with single-pulse and repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) have reported abnormal cortical responsivity manifesting as greater motor evoked potential (MEP) amplitude, lower threshold for phosphenes production, and paradoxical effects in response to both depressing or enhancing repetitive TMS methodologies. Studies of the trigeminal system in MA are sparse and the few available showed lack of blink reflex habituation and abnormal findings on SFEMG reflecting subclinical, probably inherited, dysfunctions of neuromuscular transmission. The limited studies that were able to investigate patients during the aura revealed suppression of evoked potentials, desynchronization in extrastriate areas and in the temporal lobe, and large variations in direct current potentials with magnetoelectroencephalography. Contrary to what has been observed in the most common forms of migraine, patients with familial hemiplegic migraine show greater habituation in response to visual and trigeminal stimuli, as well as a higher motor threshold and a lower MEP amplitude than healthy subjects.Entities:
Keywords: Cortical excitability; Habituation; Interhemispheric asymmetry; Neuromodulation; Paradoxical responses; Slow rhythms
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31035929 PMCID: PMC6734510 DOI: 10.1186/s10194-019-0997-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Synoptic table of neurophysiological changes comparing episodic migraine with aura (MA) between attacks, during the aura phase, and familiar hemiplegic migraine (FHM). Arrows indicate the direction of change
| Episodic migraine with aura between attacks | Episodic migraine during the aura | FHM | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Technique | |||
| EEG & MEG | ↑ photic driving, ↑ of slow, and hyper synchronized alpha rhythmic activity | On EEG, mild asymmetry of slow waves contralateral to the visual fiend defect | Unilateral or bilateral delta EEG activity – sometimes spreading postero-anteriorly – and ↓ of alpha |
| On MEG, alpha and gamma rhythm ERD contralateral to the visual fiend defect, slow direct current potential shifts | |||
| EP & ERP grand-average | ↑ amplitude (more than in MO) or normal, ↓ thalamocortical activity | ↓ or abolition of cortical EPs in the hemisphere contralateral to the field defect | |
| EP & ERP Habituation | ↓ habituation (more than in MO) or normal | ↓ habituation during persistent aura without infarction | Significantly more pronounced habituation during VEPs and nBR recordings than controls |
| TMS | Paradoxical effects to enhancing and reducing paradigms of stimulation | ↓ MEP amplitude on the ictally paretic side | |
| EMG recordings | ↓ Habituation of nBR, subclinical abnormalities of neuromuscular transmission on SFEMG | ||
EEG electroencephalography, EMG electromyography, EP, evoked potentials (visual, somatosensory and auditory), ERD event-related desynchronization, ERP event-related potentials, MEG magnetoelectroencephalography, MEP motor evoked potential, MO episodic migraine without aura, nBR nociceptive blinck reflex, TMS transcranial magnetic stimulation