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Lack of cold pressor test-induced effect on visual-evoked potentials in migraine

In patients with migraine, the various sensory stimulation modalities, including visual stimuli, invariably fail to elicit the normal response habituation. Whether this lack of habituation depends on abnormal activity in the sub-cortical structures responsible for processing incoming information as...

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Autores principales: Coppola, Gianluca, Currà, Antonio, Serrao, Mariano, Di Lorenzo, Cherubino, Gorini, Manuela, Porretta, Elisa, Alibardi, Alessia, Parisi, Vincenzo, Pierelli, Francesco
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Milan 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3452283/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20012123
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10194-009-0177-4
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author Coppola, Gianluca
Currà, Antonio
Serrao, Mariano
Di Lorenzo, Cherubino
Gorini, Manuela
Porretta, Elisa
Alibardi, Alessia
Parisi, Vincenzo
Pierelli, Francesco
author_facet Coppola, Gianluca
Currà, Antonio
Serrao, Mariano
Di Lorenzo, Cherubino
Gorini, Manuela
Porretta, Elisa
Alibardi, Alessia
Parisi, Vincenzo
Pierelli, Francesco
author_sort Coppola, Gianluca
collection PubMed
description In patients with migraine, the various sensory stimulation modalities, including visual stimuli, invariably fail to elicit the normal response habituation. Whether this lack of habituation depends on abnormal activity in the sub-cortical structures responsible for processing incoming information as well as nociception and antinociception or on abnormal cortical excitability per se remains debateable. To find out whether inducing tonic pain in the hand by cold pressure test (CPT) alters the lack of visual-evoked potential (VEP) habituation in migraineurs without aura studied between attacks we recorded VEPs in 19 healthy subjects and in 12 migraine patients during four experimental conditions: baseline; no-pain (hand held in warm water, 25°C); pain (hand held in cold water, 2–4°C); and after-effects. We measured P100 amplitudes from six blocks of 100 sweeps, and assessed habituation from amplitude changes between the six sequential blocks. In healthy subjects, the CPT decreased block 1 VEP amplitude and abolished the normal VEP habituation (amplitude decrease to repeated stimulation) in patients with migraine studied between attacks; it left block 1 VEP amplitude and abnormal VEP habituation unchanged. These findings suggest that the interictal cortical dysfunction induced by migraine prevents the cortical changes induced by tonic painful stimulation both during pain and after pain ends. Because such cortical changes presumably reflect plasticity mechanisms in the stimulated cortex, our study suggests altered plasticity of sensory cortices in migraine. Whether this abnormality reflects abnormal functional activity in the subcortical structures subserving tonic pain activation remains conjectural.
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spelling pubmed-34522832012-11-29 Lack of cold pressor test-induced effect on visual-evoked potentials in migraine Coppola, Gianluca Currà, Antonio Serrao, Mariano Di Lorenzo, Cherubino Gorini, Manuela Porretta, Elisa Alibardi, Alessia Parisi, Vincenzo Pierelli, Francesco J Headache Pain Original In patients with migraine, the various sensory stimulation modalities, including visual stimuli, invariably fail to elicit the normal response habituation. Whether this lack of habituation depends on abnormal activity in the sub-cortical structures responsible for processing incoming information as well as nociception and antinociception or on abnormal cortical excitability per se remains debateable. To find out whether inducing tonic pain in the hand by cold pressure test (CPT) alters the lack of visual-evoked potential (VEP) habituation in migraineurs without aura studied between attacks we recorded VEPs in 19 healthy subjects and in 12 migraine patients during four experimental conditions: baseline; no-pain (hand held in warm water, 25°C); pain (hand held in cold water, 2–4°C); and after-effects. We measured P100 amplitudes from six blocks of 100 sweeps, and assessed habituation from amplitude changes between the six sequential blocks. In healthy subjects, the CPT decreased block 1 VEP amplitude and abolished the normal VEP habituation (amplitude decrease to repeated stimulation) in patients with migraine studied between attacks; it left block 1 VEP amplitude and abnormal VEP habituation unchanged. These findings suggest that the interictal cortical dysfunction induced by migraine prevents the cortical changes induced by tonic painful stimulation both during pain and after pain ends. Because such cortical changes presumably reflect plasticity mechanisms in the stimulated cortex, our study suggests altered plasticity of sensory cortices in migraine. Whether this abnormality reflects abnormal functional activity in the subcortical structures subserving tonic pain activation remains conjectural. Springer Milan 2009-12-10 2010-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3452283/ /pubmed/20012123 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10194-009-0177-4 Text en © Springer-Verlag 2009
spellingShingle Original
Coppola, Gianluca
Currà, Antonio
Serrao, Mariano
Di Lorenzo, Cherubino
Gorini, Manuela
Porretta, Elisa
Alibardi, Alessia
Parisi, Vincenzo
Pierelli, Francesco
Lack of cold pressor test-induced effect on visual-evoked potentials in migraine
title Lack of cold pressor test-induced effect on visual-evoked potentials in migraine
title_full Lack of cold pressor test-induced effect on visual-evoked potentials in migraine
title_fullStr Lack of cold pressor test-induced effect on visual-evoked potentials in migraine
title_full_unstemmed Lack of cold pressor test-induced effect on visual-evoked potentials in migraine
title_short Lack of cold pressor test-induced effect on visual-evoked potentials in migraine
title_sort lack of cold pressor test-induced effect on visual-evoked potentials in migraine
topic Original
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3452283/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20012123
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10194-009-0177-4
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