光环
偏头痛
缺氧(环境)
先兆偏头痛
医学
麻醉
内科学
家族性偏瘫性偏头痛
心脏病学
内分泌学
化学
氧气
有机化学
作者
Nanna Arngrim,Henrik Winther Schytz,Josefine Britze,Faisal Mohammad Amin,Mark B. Vestergaard,Anders Hougaard,Frauke Wolfram,Patrick J.H. de Koning,Karsten Skovgaard Olsen,Niels H. Secher,Henrik Larsson,Jes Olesen,Messoud Ashina
出处
期刊:Brain
[Oxford University Press]
日期:2015-12-16
卷期号:139 (3): 723-737
被引量:108
摘要
See Schoenen (doi: 10.1093/awv402 ) for a scientific commentary on this article. Migraine with aura is prevalent in high-altitude populations suggesting an association between migraine aura and hypoxia. We investigated whether experimental hypoxia triggers migraine and aura attacks in patients suffering from migraine with aura. We also investigated the metabolic and vascular response to hypoxia. In a randomized double-blind crossover study design, 15 migraine with aura patients were exposed to 180 min of normobaric hypoxia (capillary oxygen saturation 70–75%) or sham on two separate days and 14 healthy controls were exposed to hypoxia. Glutamate and lactate concentrations in the visual cortex were measured by proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The circumference of cranial arteries was measured by 3 T high-resolution magnetic resonance angiography. Hypoxia induced migraine-like attacks in eight patients compared to one patient after sham ( P = 0.039), aura in three and possible aura in 4 of 15 patients. Hypoxia did not change glutamate concentration in the visual cortex compared to sham, but increased lactate concentration ( P = 0.028) and circumference of the cranial arteries ( P < 0.05). We found no difference in the metabolic or vascular responses to hypoxia between migraine patients and controls. In conclusion, hypoxia induced migraine-like attacks with and without aura and dilated the cranial arteries in patients with migraine with aura. Hypoxia-induced attacks were not associated with altered concentration of glutamate or other metabolites. The present study suggests that hypoxia may provoke migraine headache and aura symptoms in some patients. The mechanisms behind the migraine-inducing effect of hypoxia should be further investigated. See Schoenen (doi: 10.1093/awv402 ) for a scientific commentary on this article. Migraine with aura is prevalent in high-altitude populations, suggesting an association with hypoxia. Arngrim et al. show that experimental hypoxia provokes migraine attacks in patients with a history of migraine with aura, and triggers dilation of cranial arteries. Using hypoxia to trigger aura will aid investigation of the underlying mechanisms.
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