2020
DOI: 10.1101/2020.04.14.041616
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Gaba and Glutamate Changes in Pediatric Migraine

Abstract: Despite migraine being one of the top five most prevalent childhood diseases, a lack of knowledge about pediatric migraine limits effective treatment strategies; standard adult pharmaceutical therapies are less effective in children and can carry undesirable side-effects. Non-pharmacological therapies have shown some success in adults; however, to appropriately apply these in children we need to understand pediatric migraine's underlying biology. One theory is that migraine results from an imbalance in cortica… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(3 citation statements)
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“…Firstly, the higher GABA+ levels observed in the migraine group compared with controls in this study were hypothesized a priori and are consistent with previous data. Previous data demonstrating this same increase in GABA/GABA+ in migraine includes pooled data from our meta-analysis, a recent high-quality study in a pediatric cohort 5 and our previous cohort study. 2 Conversely, decreased GABA+ has been reported in a single study of people with migraine 9 and related to headache severity 7 in another.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 56%
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“…Firstly, the higher GABA+ levels observed in the migraine group compared with controls in this study were hypothesized a priori and are consistent with previous data. Previous data demonstrating this same increase in GABA/GABA+ in migraine includes pooled data from our meta-analysis, a recent high-quality study in a pediatric cohort 5 and our previous cohort study. 2 Conversely, decreased GABA+ has been reported in a single study of people with migraine 9 and related to headache severity 7 in another.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 56%
“…We can speculate that the increased level of GABA+ observed in the pain groups could potentially be explained by 2 proposed mechanisms. Firstly, increased GABA+ could be reflective of an adaptive response developed over time in response to pain, as proposed by Bigal et al 7 and supported by Bell et al 5 All the included participants were experiencing chronic pain of over 3 months in duration: migraine (median [IQR], 18 years, [10.5 to 25 years]), whiplash-headache (2.7 years [1.5 to 4 years]) and low back pain (5 years [2 to 12 years]). It is therefore possible that the central nervous system has affected the metabolism of GABA, the main inhibitory neurometabolite of the central nervous system, in response to the ongoing levels of pain experienced by the participant.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 83%
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