Zurück
  • ePoster
  • P94

Vestibular signs in experimentally induced migraine attacks: a post-hoc, exploratory analysis

Termin

Datum:
Zeit:
Redezeit:
Diskussionszeit:
Ort / Stream:
ePoster Terminal 9

Poster

Vestibular signs in experimentally induced migraine attacks: a post-hoc, exploratory analysis

Themen

  • Headache, thalamus and other brain nuclei
  • Migraine

Mitwirkende

Michele Corrado (Pavia/ IT), Federico Bighiani (Pavia/ IT), Chiara Demartini (Pavia/ IT), Rosaria Greco (Pavia/ IT), Annamaria Zanaboni (Pavia/ IT), Valentina Grillo (Pavia/ IT), Grazia Sances (Pavia/ IT), Marta Allena (Pavia/ IT), Cristina Tassorelli (Pavia/ IT), Roberto De Icco (Pavia/ IT)

Abstract

Abstract text (incl. figure legends and references)

Question: Vestibular migraine (VM) as defined in ICHD-3 represents one of the most common vestibular syndromes, although its pathophysiology is not fully understood. The acute phase of VM is characterized by transitory oculo-vestibular signs (OVSs) that usually disappear outside of the VM attack. The difficulty to study spontaneous migraine attacks led to inconsistent results, and we believe that the adoption of human migraine models can help overcome this issue.

Methods: In this post-hoc analysis, we investigated the incidence of OVSs during experimentally induced migraine attacks in 24 episodic migraine patients without VM and 19 healthy controls exposed to sublingual nitroglycerin (NTG 0.9 mg). A comprehensive oculo-vestibular examination was performed at baseline, at migraine-like onset and before hospital discharge (180 minutes after NTG).

Results: Sixteen out of the 24 migraine patients developed a migraine-like attack (66.7%). Three of them (12.5%) developed OVSs during the migraine-like attack. In line with previous literature, we described a combination of central (down-beating nystagmus) and peripheral (bilateral deficit of vestibulo-ocular reflex) vestibular signs. Noteworthy, no patients with a negative induction test developed OVSs. No OVSs were detected in healthy subjects at any timepoints. Noteworthy, no subjects complained of vestibular symptoms throughout the study procedures.

Conclusions: Human migraine models may indeed be appropriate tools to evaluate the vestibular dysfunction in migraine and in VM under well-controlled experimental conditions. The present findings represent a starting point to design future ad-hoc and well-powered studies to deepen our knowledge on this topic.

  • © Conventus Congressmanagement & Marketing GmbH