4.5 Review

The Insula: A Hub of Activity in Migraine

Journal

NEUROSCIENTIST
Volume 22, Issue 6, Pages 632-652

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1073858415601369

Keywords

interoception; pain; autonomic function; brain connectivity; salience network; headache; functional networks; sensory processing; emotional processing; brain imaging; fMRI; PET; lateral sulcus

Funding

  1. NIH [NINDS K24 NS064050, R01 R01NS056195]

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The insula, a cortical hub buried within the lateral sulcus, is involved in a number of processes including goal-directed cognition, conscious awareness, autonomic regulation, interoception, and somatosensation. While some of these processes are well known in the clinical presentation of migraine (i.e., autonomic and somatosensory alterations), other more complex behaviors in migraine, such as conscious awareness and error detection, are less well described. Since the insula processes and relays afferent inputs from brain areas involved in these functions to areas involved in higher cortical function such as frontal, temporal, and parietal regions, it may be implicated as a brain region that translates the signals of altered internal milieu in migraine, along with other chronic pain conditions, through the insula into complex behaviors. Here we review how the insula function and structure is altered in migraine. As a brain region of a number of brain functions, it may serve as a model to study new potential clinical perspectives for migraine treatment.

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