Migraines are a very unpleasant variety of headaches, often associated with other symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, photophobia (aversion to light) and visual disturbances. Hundreds of millions of people around the world suffer regular migraines, but their brain basis remains largely unclear. Now a new paper reports that the origin of migraines may have been pinpointed - in the brain of one sufferer, at least. German neuroscientists Laura H. Schulte and Arne May used fMRI to record brain activity in one migraine sufferer, a woman, who was scanned once per day for 30 days straight.During the month of the study, the patient suffered three migraines, lasting one or two days each. She chose not to take any medications during the study period. To evoke brain activity, Schulte and May exposed the patient to a small amount of ammonia vapor, a painful and unpleasant stimulus. Schulte and May found that on ...
Pinpointing the Origins of Migraine in the Brain
Discover the hypothalamic origin of migraines and its link to altered neural activity in the migraine cycle study.
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