2006
DOI: 10.1161/01.str.0000226589.00599.4d
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Brain Gray Matter Changes in Migraine Patients With T2-Visible Lesions

Abstract: Background and Purpose-In migraine patients, functional imaging studies have shown changes in several brain gray matter (GM) regions. However, 1.5-T MRI has failed to detect any structural abnormality of these regions. We used a 3-T MRI scanner and voxel-based morphometry (VBM) to assess whether GM density abnormalities can be seen in patients with migraine with T2-visible abnormalities and to grade their extent. Methods-In 16 migraine patients with T2-visible abnormalities and 15 matched controls, we acquired… Show more

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Cited by 301 publications
(290 citation statements)
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“…The corollary to this is the recognition that patients with MH have a 13% incidence of abnormal MRI findings. 26 We hypothesize that these unidentified bright objects on MRI will be found to be associated with PFO and are the result of multiple small emboli. The 40% incidence of MH in patients with cryptogenic stroke is significantly greater than the 12% expected in the general population.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…The corollary to this is the recognition that patients with MH have a 13% incidence of abnormal MRI findings. 26 We hypothesize that these unidentified bright objects on MRI will be found to be associated with PFO and are the result of multiple small emboli. The 40% incidence of MH in patients with cryptogenic stroke is significantly greater than the 12% expected in the general population.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…cortical sensitivity and % responsivity to sensory stimuli [35,36] % fractional anisotropy thalamus (MR-DTI) [43] ! cortical thickness and activation S1, temporal lobe [26] % cortical thickness and/or activation insula, cingulate, visual areas [24,26] % rs connectivity amygdala-insula [27] % iron content PAG and globus pallidus [29][30][31] % rs connectivity PAG-precuneus, visual [25] % tissue density in PAG [129] ! olfaction-induced trigeminal nucleus activation % pre-ictally [130] % subclinical posterior circulation infarcts [30] Chronic migraine % cortical sensitivity and !…”
Section: Episodic Migraine (Interictal)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There was also a decrease of the N-acetylaspartate concentration (i.e., a marker of neuronal well-being) in the prefrontal cortex of these patients. 75 The reduction of grey matter has been described not only in lower back pain, 16,76 but also in several other chronic pain conditions such as migraine, 77,78 chronic tension headache, 72 irritable bowel syndrome, 79 and fibromyalgia. 74 It remains to be determined whether these changes are due to chronic pain conditions itself, the drugs the patients are taking, the lifestyle changes due to disuse or a combination of these factors.…”
Section: Consequences Of Not Alleviating Chronic Pain: Structural Bramentioning
confidence: 99%