학술논문

Interictal lack of habituation of mismatch negativity in migraine.
Document Type
Article
Source
Cephalalgia. Aug2004, Vol. 24 Issue 8, p663-668. 6p.
Subject
*MIGRAINE
*HEADACHE
*HABITUATION (Neuropsychology)
*WORD deafness
*PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY
Language
ISSN
0333-1024
Abstract
de Tommaso M, Guido M, Libro G, Losito L, Difruscolo O, Sardaro M & Puca F M. Interictal lack of habituation of mismatch negativity in migraine. Cephalalgia 2004. London. ISSN 0333-1024 The aim was to study mismatch negativity features and habituation during the interictal phase of migraine. In migraine patients, a strong negative correlation has been found between the initial amplitude of long latency auditory-evoked potentials and their amplitude increase during subsequent averaging. We studied 12 outpatients with a diagnosis of migraine without aura recorded in a headache-free interval and 10 gender- and age-matched healthy volunteers not suffering from any recurrent headache. The experiment consisted of two sequential blocks of 2000 stimulations, during which 1800 (90%) recordings for standard tones and 200 (10%) for target tones were selected for averaging. The latency of the N1 component was significantly increased in migraine patients in respect of controls in both the first and second repetitions; the MMN latency was increased in the second repetition. In the control group the MMN amplitude decreased on average by 3.2 ± 1.4 µV in the second trial, whereas in migraine patients it showed a slight increase of 0.21 ± 0.11 µV in the second repetition. The MMN latency relieved in the second trial was significantly correlated with the duration of illness in the migraine patients (Spearman correlation coefficient: 0.69; P < 0.05). The increases in N1 latency and MMN latency and amplitude, the latter correlated with duration of illness, seemed to be due to a reduced anticipatory effect of stimulus repetition in migraine patients. This suggests that such hypo-activity of automatic cortical processes, subtending the discrimination of acoustic stimuli, may be a basic abnormality in migraine, developing in the course of the disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]