4.7 Article

Visual cortex and cerebellum hyperactivation during negative emotion picture stimuli in migraine patients

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/srep41919

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81571658, 81201082, 81070914]
  2. Research Innovation Project from Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Commission [14JC1404300]
  3. Open Fund of National Key Laboratory of Medical and Neurobiology of Fudan University [SKLMN2014001]
  4. SHSMU-ION Research Center for Brain Disorders
  5. Clinical Science and Technology Innovation Project of Shanghai ShenKang Hospital Development Center [SHDC12015310]

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Migraines are a common and undertreated disease and often have psychiatric comorbidities; however, the abnormal mechanism of emotional processing in migraine patients has not been well clarified. This study sought to investigate the different brain functional activation to neutral, positive and negative emotional stimuli between migraine and healthy subjects. Twenty-six adults with migraines and 26 healthy adults, group-matched for sex and age, participated in this experiment. Although there were no significant differences between two groups during the viewing of positive affective pictures vs. neutral affective pictures, there were different activation patterns during the viewing of negative to neutral affective pictures in the two groups; the control group showed both increased and decreased activation patterns, while the migraine subjects showed only increased activation. Negative affective pictures elicited stronger activation than neutral affective pictures in migraineurs, which included the bilateral cerebellum anterior lobe/culmen, the bilateral lingual gyri, the bilateral precuneus and the left cuneus. Our data indicated that migraine patients were hypersensitive to negative stimuli, which might provide clues to aid in the understanding of the pathophysiology and psychiatric comorbidities of migraines.

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