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Recent advances in understanding migraine mechanisms, molecules and therapeutics

Journal

TRENDS IN MOLECULAR MEDICINE
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages 39-44

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.molmed.2006.11.005

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Migraine is a complex, disabling disorder of the brain that manifests itself as attacks of often severe, throbbing head pain with sensory sensitivity to light, sound and head movement. There is a clear familial tendency to migraine, which has been well defined in a rare autosomal dominant form of familial hemiplegic migraine (FHM). FHM mutations so far identified include those in CACNA1A (P/Q voltage-gated Ca2+ channel), ATP1A2 (N*-K+-ATPase) and SCN1A (Na+ channel) genes. Physiological studies in, humans and studies of the experimental correlate - cortical spreading depression (CSD) - provide understanding of aura, and have explored in recent years the effect of migraine preventives in CSD. Therapeutic developments in migraine have come by targeting the trigeminovascular system, with the most-recent being the proof-of-principle study of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) receptor antagonists in acute migraine. To understand the basic pathophysiology of migraine, brain imaging studies have firmly established reproducible changes in the brainstem in regions that include areas that are involved in sensory modulation. These data lead to the view that migraine is a form of sensory dysmodulation - a system failure of normal sensory processing.

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