| Literature DB >> 34073933 |
Marta Waliszewska-Prosół1, Marta Nowakowska-Kotas1, Justyna Chojdak-Łukasiewicz1, Sławomir Budrewicz1.
Abstract
Migraine and sleep disorders are common chronic diseases in the general population, with significant negative social and economic impacts. The association between both of these phenomena has been observed by clinicians for years and is confirmed by many epidemiological studies. Despite this, the nature of this relationship is still not fully understood. In recent years, there has been rapid progress in understanding the common anatomical structures of and pathogenetic mechanism between sleep and migraine. Based on a literature review, the authors present the current view on this topic as well as ongoing research in this field, with reference to the key points of the biochemical and neurophysiological processes responsible for both these disorders. In the future, a better understanding of these mechanisms will significantly expand the range of treatment options.Entities:
Keywords: dopamine; melatonin; migraine; orexins; serotonin; sleep; sleep disorders
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34073933 PMCID: PMC8197397 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22115539
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Classification of sleep disturbances according to The International Classification of Sleep Disorders, third edition (ICSD-3) [11].
| Major Diagnostic Sections | Definition | Disorder |
|---|---|---|
| Insomnia | Difficulty initiating or maintain sleep, poor quality of sleep | Chronic insomnia disorder |
| Sleep-related breathing disorders * | Abnormal respiration during sleep characterized by intermittent partial or complete upper airway obstruction | OSA disorders: OSA, adult, OSA pediatric |
| Central Disorders of Hypersomnolence | Daytime sleepiness not associated with disturbed sleep or misaligned circadian rhythms | Narcolepsy type 1 * |
| Circadian Rhythm Sleep-Wake Disorders * | Sleep disturbance due to misalignment between environment ant the individual’s sleep-wake cycle | Delayed sleep-wake phase disorder |
| Parasomnias | Undesirable movements, behaviors, perceptions or dreams, that occur during sleep or arousals from sleep without conscious awareness | NREM-related parasomnias: * |
| Sleep Related Movement Disorders * | Simple, stereotypic movements that disrupt sleep | Restless legs syndrome |
| Others sleep disorders | Sleep disorders that cannot be appropriately classified elsewhere |
Sleep disorders marked with * appear to be significantly associated with migraine.
Major sleep-related neurotransmitter systems and common points with sleep disorders.
| Neurotransmitter | Potential Common Mechanism for Sleep and Migraine |
|---|---|
| Adenosine |
endogenus somnogen released from neurons or glia cells NREM and REM sleep induced through action of A1 or A2A receptors in: basal forebrain, lateral hypothalamus, tuberomammillary nucleus (TMN), ventrolateral preoptic neurons in the hypothalamus (VLPO) |
| Cholinergic system |
pedunculopontine tegmental (PPT) and lateral dorsal tegmental nuclei (LDT) neurons–promotion of wakefulness basal forebrain–promotion of wakefulness |
| Dopaminergic system | ventrolateral tegmental nucleus (VTA) located in midbrain–consolidate wakefulness periaqueductal grey neurons–antinociception |
| GABA |
ventrolateral preoptic neurons in the hypothalamus (VLPO), ventrolateral tegmental nucleus (VTA)–promotion of NREM parafacial zone (PZ)–induction of deep NREM ventrolateral periaqueductal grey region (vlPAG)–stabilization of NREM sleep, reduction of REM sleep |
| Galanin | ventrolateral preoptic neurons in the hypothalamus (VLPO)–promotion of NREM |
| Histamine | tuberomammillary nucleus (TMN) located in posterior hypothalamus–promotion of wakefulness |
| Melanin | lateral hypothalamic area–promotion of REM sleep, promotion of NREM sleep in some conditions |
| Noradrenaline | locus coeruleus––inhibition of the ventrolateral preoptic neurons in the hypothalamus (VLPO)–promotion of wakefulness |
| Orexin (also referred to as hypocretin neurons) | lateral hypothalamic area–promotion of wakefulness |
| Serotonin | dorsal raphe nuclei–inhibition of REM and initiation of sleep but also mood regulation, food intake, temperature regulation |
Anatomical structures involved in sleep and migraine regulation (modification based of [16,30]).
| Anatomical Structures | Sleep | Migraine |
|---|---|---|
|
periaqueductal gray (dopamine) dorsal raphe nucleus (serotonin) locus coerulus (norepinephrine) |
promotion of wakefulness stabilization of the walking state control of the transition to sleep |
pain transmission pain modulation |
|
posterior hypothalamus (dopamine) lateral hypothalamus (orexin) |
promotion of wakefulness, regulation of circadian rhythm, control of sleep-wake transition |
processing, transmission, modulation of pain |
|
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promotion of wakefulness and integration of sub-cortical sleep-wake inputs |
processing and transmission of nociceptive information |
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promotion of wakefulness |
pain processing pain modulation |