4.7 Article

Hypothalamus as a mediator of chronic migraine Evidence from high-resolution fMRI

Journal

NEUROLOGY
Volume 88, Issue 21, Pages 2011-2016

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000003963

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Funding

  1. 7th Framework EU-project EuroHeadPain [602633]
  2. German Research Foundation [SFB936/A5]

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Objective: To identify pathophysiologic mechanisms of migraine chronification using a recently standardized protocol for high-resolution brainstem imaging of trigeminal nociceptive stimulation. Methods: Eighteen episodic migraineurs (EMs), 17 chronic migraineurs (CMs), and 19 healthy controls (HCs) underwent painful ammonia stimulation of the left nostril in a 3T MRI scanner. Functional images were acquired with a brainstem-optimized protocol for high-resolution echoplanar imaging. Results: We detected a significantly stronger activation of the anterior right hypothalamus in CMs compared to HCs. To exclude the headache as a prime mediator of the hypothalamic activations, we compared all migraineurs with headaches (EMs and CMs) with all migraineurs without headaches (EMs and CMs) and HCs in a second analysis and found a more posterior region of the hypothalamus to be more activated bilaterally during headaches. Conclusions: Our data corroborate the fact that the hypothalamus plays a crucial role in the pathophysiology of migraine chronification and acute pain stage of migraineurs. While the more posterior part of the hypothalamus seems to be important for the acute pain stage, the more anterior part seems to play an important role in attack generation and migraine chronification.

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