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Sensitization of the Trigeminovascular Pathway: Perspective and Implications to Migraine Pathophysiology

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2012

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Korean Neurological Association
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Bernstein, Carolyn, and Rami Burstein. 2012. Sensitization of the trigeminovascular pathway: perspective and implications to migraine pathophysiology. Journal of Clinical Neurology 8(2): 89-99.

Abstract

Migraine headache is commonly associated with signs of exaggerated intracranial and extracranial mechanical sensitivities. Patients exhibiting signs of intracranial hypersensitivity testify that their headache throbs and that mundane physical activities that increase intracranial pressure (such as bending over or coughing) intensify the pain. Patients exhibiting signs of extracranial hypersensitivity testify that during migraine their facial skin hurts in response to otherwise innocuous activities such as combing, shaving, letting water run over their face in the shower, or wearing glasses or earrings (termed here cephalic cutaneous allodynia). Such patients often testify that during migraine their bodily skin is hypersensitive and that wearing tight cloth, bracelets, rings, necklaces and socks or using a heavy blanket can be uncomfortable and/or painful (termed her extracephalic cutaneous allodynia). This review summarizes the evidence that support the view that activation of the trigeminovascular pathway contribute to the headache phase of a migraine attack, that the development of throbbing in the initial phase of migraine is mediated by sensitization of peripheral trigeminovascular neurons that innervate the meninges, that the development of cephalic allodynia is propelled by sensitization of second-order trigeminovascular neurons in the spinal trigeminal nucleus which receive converging sensory input from the meninges as well as from the scalp and facial skin, and that the development of extracephalic allodynia is mediated by sensitization of third-order trigeminovascular neurons in the posterior thalamic nuclei which receive converging sensory input from the meninges, facial and body skin.

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Sensitization of the Trigeminovascular Pathway: Perspective… : DASH Story 2016-10-29
I am a physical therapist treating patients with neuromusculoskeletal disorders. Amongst them headache. In order to treat my patients better and understand the mechanisms behind cervicogenic headache, I was looking for boundaries and similarities between migraine, tension type headache and cervicogenic headache. In the various articles the term trigeminovascular mechanism appeared again and again. By having access through DASH to articles explaining this mechanism, I now have a better understanding of the current state of the art in this area. As I am not university based I would not have had access otherwise to this source of knowledge. Thank you very much!