Migraine and movement disorders

被引:0
|
作者
F. d’Onofrio
P. Barbanti
V. Petretta
G. Casucci
A. Mazzeo
B. Lecce
C. Mundi
D. Cologno
机构
[1] S. G. Moscati,Neurology Unit, Headache Center
[2] IRCCS San Raffaele Pisana,Department of Neurological, Motor and Sensorial Sciences, Headache and Pain Unit
[3] S. Francesco Nursing Home,Department of Neuroscience, Institute of Clinical Neurophysiology
[4] Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria “OO.RR.”,Department of Neuroscience, Neurology Unit
[5] Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria “OO.RR.”,undefined
来源
Neurological Sciences | 2012年 / 33卷
关键词
Migraine; Restless legs syndrome; Extrapyramidal system; Basal ganglia; Movement disorders;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
A large series of clinical and experimental observations on the interactions between migraine and the extrapyramidal system are available. Some previous studies reported high frequency of migraine in some basal ganglia (BG) disorders, such as essential tremor (ET), Tourette’s syndrome (TS), Sydenham’s chorea and more recently restless legs syndrome (RLS). For example, the frequency of migraine headache in a clinic sample of TS patients was found nearly fourfold more than that reported in the general population. To the best of our knowledge, no controlled studies have been conducted to determine a real association. ET and migraine headache have been considered comorbid diseases on the basis of uncontrolled studies for many years. In a recent Italian study, this comorbid association has been excluded, reporting no significant differences in the frequency of lifetime and current migraine between patients with ET and controls. Among mostly common movement disorders, RLS has been recently considered as possibly comorbid with migraine. Studies in selected patient groups strongly suggest that RLS is more common in migraine patients than in control populations, although no population-based study of the coincidence of migraine and RLS has yet been identified. The exact mechanisms and contributing factors for a positive association between migraine and RLS remain unclear. A number of possible explanations have been offered for the association of RLS and primary headache, but the three most attractive ones are a hypothetical dopaminergic dysfunction and dysfunctional brain iron metabolism, a possible genetic linkage and a sleep disturbance. More recently, the role of BG in pain processing has been confirmed by functional imaging data in the caudate, putamen and pallidum in migraine patients. A critical appraisal of all these clinical and experimental data suggests that the extrapyramidal system is somehow related to migraine. Although the primary involvement of extrapyramidal system in the pathophysiology of migraine cannot as yet be proven, a more general role in the processing of nociceptive information and/or maybe part of the complex behavioral adaptive response that characterizes migraine may be suggested.
引用
收藏
页码:55 / 59
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Migraine without aura and migraine with aura are inherited disorders
    Russell, MB
    Iselius, L
    Olesen, J
    CEPHALALGIA, 1996, 16 (05) : 305 - 309
  • [42] Movement Disorders
    Harris, Meghan K.
    Shneyder, Natalya
    Borazanci, Aimee
    Korniychuk, Elena
    Kelley, Roger E.
    Minagar, Alireza
    MEDICAL CLINICS OF NORTH AMERICA, 2009, 93 (02) : 371 - +
  • [43] Migraine and rare neurological disorders
    Emma Scelzo
    Markus Kramer
    Simona Sacco
    Alberto Proietti
    Raffaele Ornello
    Eugenio Agostino Parati
    Anna Bersano
    Neurological Sciences, 2020, 41 : 439 - 446
  • [44] Editorial: Migraine and vascular disorders
    Pezzini, Alessandro
    FRONTIERS IN PAIN RESEARCH, 2022, 3
  • [45] Migraine and gastric disorders: Are they associated?
    Hormati, Ahmad
    Akbari, Nayyereh
    Sharifipour, Ehsan
    Hejazi, Seyyed Amir
    Jafari, Fatemeh
    Alemi, Faezeh
    Mohammadbeigi, Abolfaz
    JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN MEDICAL SCIENCES, 2019, 24
  • [46] Migraine and rare neurological disorders
    Scelzo, Emma
    Kramer, Markus
    Sacco, Simona
    Proietti, Alberto
    Ornello, Raffaele
    Parati, Eugenio Agostino
    Bersano, Anna
    NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2020, 41 (SUPPL 2) : 439 - 446
  • [47] Temporomandibular disorders and migraine chronification
    Debora Bevilaqua Grossi
    Richard B. Lipton
    Marcelo E. Bigal
    Current Pain and Headache Reports, 2009, 13 : 314 - 318
  • [48] Sleep Disorders and Migraine: Review of Literature and Potential Pathophysiology Mechanisms
    Vgontzas, Angeliki
    Pavlovic, Jelena M.
    HEADACHE, 2018, 58 (07): : 1030 - 1039
  • [49] Movement Disorders A Brief Guide in Medication Management
    Julius, Anthony
    Longfellow, Katelan
    MEDICAL CLINICS OF NORTH AMERICA, 2016, 100 (04) : 733 - +
  • [50] Movement disorders induced by deep brain stimulation
    Fidel Baizabal-Carvallo, Jose
    Jankovic, Joseph
    PARKINSONISM & RELATED DISORDERS, 2016, 25 : 1 - 9