Published in

Elsevier, Neuroscience, 2(161), p. 327-341

DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2009.03.019

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Neurobiology of Migraine

Journal article published in 2009 by P. J. Goadsby, A. R. Charbit, A. P. Andreou ORCID, S. Akerman, P. R. Holland
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Migraine is a complex disorder of the brain whose mechanisms are only now being unraveled. It is common, disabling and economically costly. The pain suggests an important role of the nociceptive activation, or the perception of activation, of trigeminal cranial, particularly intracranial afferents. Moreover, the involvement of a multi-sensory disturbance that includes light, sound and smells, as well as nausea, suggests the problem may involve central modulation of afferent traffic more broadly. Brain imaging studies in migraine point to the importance of sub-cortical structures in the underlying pathophysiology of the disorder. Migraine may thus be considered an inherited dysfunction of sensory modulatory networks with the dominant disturbance affecting abnormal processing of essentially normal neural traffic.