| Literature DB >> 31133962 |
Sourena Soheili-Nezhad1,2, Alireza Sedghi3, Ferdinand Schweser4,5, Amir Eslami Shahr Babaki6, Neda Jahanshad7, Paul M Thompson7, Christian F Beckmann1,2,8, Emma Sprooten1,2, Mansoureh Toghae9.
Abstract
It remains unknown whether migraine headache has a progressive component in its pathophysiology. Quantitative MRI may provide valuable insight into abnormal changes in the migraine interictum and assist in identifying disrupted brain networks. We carried out a data-driven study of structural integrity and functional connectivity of the resting brain in migraine without aura. MRI scanning was performed in 36 patients suffering from episodic migraine without aura and 33 age-matched healthy subjects. Voxel-wise analysis of regional brain volume was performed by registration of the T1-weighted MRI scans into a common study brain template using the tensor-based morphometry (TBM) method. Changes in functional synchronicity of the brain networks were assessed using probabilistic independent component analysis (ICA). TBM revealed that migraine is associated with reduced volume of the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). Among 375 functional brain networks, resting-state connectivity was decreased between two components spanning the visual cortex, posterior insula, and parietal somatosensory cortex. Our study reveals structural and functional alterations of the brain in the migraine interictum that may stem from underlying disease risk factors and the "silent" aura phenomenon. Longitudinal studies will be needed to investigate whether interictal brain changes are progressive and associated with clinical disease trajectories.Entities:
Keywords: default-mode network; functional connectivity; independent component analysis; tensor-based morphometry; visual cortex
Year: 2019 PMID: 31133962 PMCID: PMC6515892 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2019.00442
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Migraine acute therapy medications used by the study population.
| Sumatriptan or rizatriptan | 9 |
| Ergotamine | 2 |
| Ibuprofen | 18 |
| Acetaminophen | 14 |
| Naproxen | 4 |
| Indomethacin | 3 |
| Diclofenac | 2 |
| Celecoxib | 2 |
| Mefenamic acid | 1 |
| Aspirin | 1 |
| Alternative/herbal | 2 |
Twenty two patients (61%) reported consumption of more than one analgesic agent.
Clinical characteristics of the study population.
| Subject count (female) | 36 (36) | 33 (33) |
| Age | 36.6 ± 8.8 (range: 21–54) | 36.4 ± 9.4 (range: 20–54) |
| Headache frequency (episodes/month) | 5.4 ± 5.6 | – |
| Pain intensity (1–10) | 8.2 ± 1.6 | – |
| Disease duration (years) | 12.1 ± 8.6 | – |
| Family history of chronic headache | 26 subjects (72%) | – |
Values reflect average ± standard deviation.
Figure 1Study brain template. Subjects' T1-weighted MRI volumes (n = 69) were non-linearly registered to a common space, and a minimum-deformation template that represented an “average” study brain geometry was constructed. Non-linear warps transforming each subject's native brain geometry to the common study template were calculated, converted to Jacobian determinant fields, and compared across study groups by tensor-based morphometry (TBM).
Figure 2Regional brain volume loss in migraine. (Top) Voxels passing correction for multiple comparisons across the brain (TFCE) at corrected p < 0.05. (Bottom) A seed region was placed at the volume-loss region. Resting activity of this region was correlated with the default-mode network in the study population. The connectivity map is thresholded at z-score >35.
Standard MNI coordinates of brain volume deficits in migraine without aura.
| mPFC | 17,164 (265) | 2.4 × 10−5 | 8 | 51 | 8 |
| Lt. middle frontal gyrus | 12,836 (0) | 2.4 × 10−5 | −34 | 18 | 28 |
| Rt. middle frontal gyrus | 3,193 (0) | 2.4 × 10−5 | 40 | 29 | 27 |
MNI, Montreal Neurological Institute; TFCE, threshold-free cluster enhancement; mPFC, medial prefrontal cortex.
Figure 3The default-mode network of the study population. Red-yellow: activation (correlation), blue: inhibition (anticorrelation).
Figure 4Resting-state functional connectivity changes in migraine without aura. Two components demonstrated significantly reduced functional coupling at p = 0.002, including the occipital cortex (green) and parietal-posterior insular cortex (red-yellow).
Figure 5Whole-brain functional connectivity differences. (A–D) Node-to-node correlation matrices of independent component analysis (ICA) time course are shown at various dimensions. Network edges with suggestive connectivity differences in the migraine vs. healthy group (p < 10−4) are marked by asterisks. These disease-related edges are pooled in a single cross-correlation matrix for the purpose of visualization (E, top triangle). Spatially localized clusters of connectivity disruption are observed in migraine patients (F). The sign of parameter estimates in regression models demonstrates generalized reduction of connectivity strength in migraine (E, bottom triangle; red-yellow: negative; blue: positive).