Sensory migraine aura is not associated with structural grey matter abnormalities

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Standard

Sensory migraine aura is not associated with structural grey matter abnormalities. / Hougaard, Anders; Amin, Faisal Mohammad; Arngrim, Nanna; Vlachou, Maria; Larsen, Vibeke Andrée; Larsson, Henrik B W; Ashina, Messoud.

I: NeuroImage: Clinical, Bind 11, 2016, s. 322-327.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Hougaard, A, Amin, FM, Arngrim, N, Vlachou, M, Larsen, VA, Larsson, HBW & Ashina, M 2016, 'Sensory migraine aura is not associated with structural grey matter abnormalities', NeuroImage: Clinical, bind 11, s. 322-327. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2016.02.007

APA

Hougaard, A., Amin, F. M., Arngrim, N., Vlachou, M., Larsen, V. A., Larsson, H. B. W., & Ashina, M. (2016). Sensory migraine aura is not associated with structural grey matter abnormalities. NeuroImage: Clinical, 11, 322-327. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2016.02.007

Vancouver

Hougaard A, Amin FM, Arngrim N, Vlachou M, Larsen VA, Larsson HBW o.a. Sensory migraine aura is not associated with structural grey matter abnormalities. NeuroImage: Clinical. 2016;11:322-327. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2016.02.007

Author

Hougaard, Anders ; Amin, Faisal Mohammad ; Arngrim, Nanna ; Vlachou, Maria ; Larsen, Vibeke Andrée ; Larsson, Henrik B W ; Ashina, Messoud. / Sensory migraine aura is not associated with structural grey matter abnormalities. I: NeuroImage: Clinical. 2016 ; Bind 11. s. 322-327.

Bibtex

@article{b6a2f01795b24d82ba59f2be930c1e7d,
title = "Sensory migraine aura is not associated with structural grey matter abnormalities",
abstract = "Migraine with aura (MA) is characterized by cortical dysfunction. Frequent aura attacks may alter cerebral cortical structure in patients, or structural grey matter abnormalities may predispose MA patients to aura attacks. In the present study we aimed to investigate cerebral grey matter structure in a large group of MA patients with and without sensory aura (i.e. gradually developing, transient unilateral sensory disturbances). We included 60 patients suffering from migraine with typical visual aura and 60 individually age and sex-matched controls. Twenty-nine of the patients additionally experienced sensory aura regularly. We analysed high-resolution structural MR images using two complimentary approaches and compared patients with and without sensory aura. Patients were also compared to controls. We found no differences of grey matter density or cortical thickness between patients with and without sensory aura and no differences for the cortical visual areas between patients and controls. The somatosensory cortex was thinner in patients (1.92 mm vs. 1.96 mm, P = 0.043) and the anterior cingulate cortex of patients had a decreased grey matter density (P = 0.039) compared to controls. These differences were not correlated to the clinical characteristics. Our results suggest that sensory migraine aura is not associated with altered grey matter structure and that patients with visual aura have normal cortical structure of areas involved in visual processing. The observed decreased grey matter volume of the cingulate gyrus in patients compared to controls have previously been reported in migraine with and without aura, but also in a wide range of other neurologic and psychiatric disorders. Most likely, this finding reflects general bias between patients and healthy controls.",
author = "Anders Hougaard and Amin, {Faisal Mohammad} and Nanna Arngrim and Maria Vlachou and Larsen, {Vibeke Andr{\'e}e} and Larsson, {Henrik B W} and Messoud Ashina",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1016/j.nicl.2016.02.007",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "322--327",
journal = "NeuroImage: Clinical",
issn = "2213-1582",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Sensory migraine aura is not associated with structural grey matter abnormalities

AU - Hougaard, Anders

AU - Amin, Faisal Mohammad

AU - Arngrim, Nanna

AU - Vlachou, Maria

AU - Larsen, Vibeke Andrée

AU - Larsson, Henrik B W

AU - Ashina, Messoud

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Migraine with aura (MA) is characterized by cortical dysfunction. Frequent aura attacks may alter cerebral cortical structure in patients, or structural grey matter abnormalities may predispose MA patients to aura attacks. In the present study we aimed to investigate cerebral grey matter structure in a large group of MA patients with and without sensory aura (i.e. gradually developing, transient unilateral sensory disturbances). We included 60 patients suffering from migraine with typical visual aura and 60 individually age and sex-matched controls. Twenty-nine of the patients additionally experienced sensory aura regularly. We analysed high-resolution structural MR images using two complimentary approaches and compared patients with and without sensory aura. Patients were also compared to controls. We found no differences of grey matter density or cortical thickness between patients with and without sensory aura and no differences for the cortical visual areas between patients and controls. The somatosensory cortex was thinner in patients (1.92 mm vs. 1.96 mm, P = 0.043) and the anterior cingulate cortex of patients had a decreased grey matter density (P = 0.039) compared to controls. These differences were not correlated to the clinical characteristics. Our results suggest that sensory migraine aura is not associated with altered grey matter structure and that patients with visual aura have normal cortical structure of areas involved in visual processing. The observed decreased grey matter volume of the cingulate gyrus in patients compared to controls have previously been reported in migraine with and without aura, but also in a wide range of other neurologic and psychiatric disorders. Most likely, this finding reflects general bias between patients and healthy controls.

AB - Migraine with aura (MA) is characterized by cortical dysfunction. Frequent aura attacks may alter cerebral cortical structure in patients, or structural grey matter abnormalities may predispose MA patients to aura attacks. In the present study we aimed to investigate cerebral grey matter structure in a large group of MA patients with and without sensory aura (i.e. gradually developing, transient unilateral sensory disturbances). We included 60 patients suffering from migraine with typical visual aura and 60 individually age and sex-matched controls. Twenty-nine of the patients additionally experienced sensory aura regularly. We analysed high-resolution structural MR images using two complimentary approaches and compared patients with and without sensory aura. Patients were also compared to controls. We found no differences of grey matter density or cortical thickness between patients with and without sensory aura and no differences for the cortical visual areas between patients and controls. The somatosensory cortex was thinner in patients (1.92 mm vs. 1.96 mm, P = 0.043) and the anterior cingulate cortex of patients had a decreased grey matter density (P = 0.039) compared to controls. These differences were not correlated to the clinical characteristics. Our results suggest that sensory migraine aura is not associated with altered grey matter structure and that patients with visual aura have normal cortical structure of areas involved in visual processing. The observed decreased grey matter volume of the cingulate gyrus in patients compared to controls have previously been reported in migraine with and without aura, but also in a wide range of other neurologic and psychiatric disorders. Most likely, this finding reflects general bias between patients and healthy controls.

U2 - 10.1016/j.nicl.2016.02.007

DO - 10.1016/j.nicl.2016.02.007

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 27298761

AN - SCOPUS:84960436542

VL - 11

SP - 322

EP - 327

JO - NeuroImage: Clinical

JF - NeuroImage: Clinical

SN - 2213-1582

ER -

ID: 179224255