4.5 Article

Effects of remote cutaneous pain on trigeminal laser-evoked potentials in migraine patients

Journal

JOURNAL OF HEADACHE AND PAIN
Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages 167-174

Publisher

SPRINGER-VERLAG ITALIA SRL
DOI: 10.1007/s10194-007-0385-8

Keywords

migraine; laser-evoked potentials; diffuse; noxious inhibiting control

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The present study aimed to evaluate heat pain thresholds and evoked potentials following CO2 laser thermal stimulation (laser-evoked potentials, LEPs), during remote application of capsaicin, in migraine patients vs. non-migraine healthy controls. Twelve outpatients suffering from migraine without aura were compared with 10 healthy controls. The LEPs were recorded by 6 scalp electrodes, stimulating the dorsum of the right hand and the right supraorbital zone in basal condition, during the application of 3% capsaicin on the dorsum of the left hand and after capsaicin removal. In normal subjects, the laser pain and the N2-P2 vertex complex obtained by the hand and face stimulation were significantly reduced during remote capsaicin application, with respect to pre- and post-capsaicin conditions, while in migraine LEPs and laser pain were not significantly modified during remote painful stimulation. In migraine a defective brain-stem inhibiting control may coexist with cognitive factors of focalised attention to facial pain, less sensitive to distraction by a second pain.

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