Migraine (mechanism of disease)

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 20 เม.ย. 2023
  • This is a flowchart on migraines, covering the etiology, pathophysiology, and manifestations.
    ADDITIONAL TAGS:
    Activation of autonomic nervous system
    ↑ parasympathetic tone
    Risk factors / SDOH
    Cell / tissue damage
    Nervous system path
    Migraine
    Medicine / drugs
    Infectious / microbial
    Hormones / metabolic
    Immunology / inflammation
    Signs / symptoms
    Tests / imaging / labs
    Diet / consumption
    Genetics / hereditary
    Flow physiology
    Pathophysiology
    Etiology
    Manifestations
    Activation of meningeal nociceptors
    Dilatation of intracranial blood vessels
    Activation of trigeminal neurons
    Vasoactive neuropeptides (substance P, CGRP) released
    Proinflammatory molecules (histamine, bradykinin, serotonin, prostaglandins) released
    Neurogenic inflammation
    Trigeminovascular pathway:
    Wave of depolarization in cerebral cortex
    Excitation then suppression of neural activity
    Cortical spreading depression:
    Vasodilation (might be epiphenomenon):
    70%: Genetic predisposition to poor brain habituation to external stimuli (stress, hormonal changes)
    Hyperexcitable brain
    Initiation of migraine
    Dysregulation of pain sensitization in the trigeminal (CN V) system
    Nausea, vomiting
    Change in appetite
    Yawning
    Fatigue
    Anxiety
    Depression
    Potential triggers
    Alcohol, nicotine, citrus fruits, dairy, tyramine foods (chocolate, red wine)
    Poor sleep habits
    Emotional stress
    Weather changes
    Menstruation, hormone intake (OCPs)
    Lacrimation
    Nasal congestion
    Stages of migraine attack:
    Prodrome (1-2 days before headache):
    Change in mood
    Difficulty reading
    Difficulty writing
    Aura (25%; lasting 60 min before headache; gradual, reversible):
    Visual (most common):
    Scintillating scotoma (arch-shaped visual def, central → peripheral)
    Flashing lights/spots/lines
    Blurry vision
    Distorted color perception
    Numbness
    Pins and needles
    Aphasia
    Paresis (atypical)
    Dizziness (atypical)
    Headache (usually lasting 4-24 hours):
    Headache; usually unilateral, especially fronto(temporal), retro-orbital; can be pulsating, throbbing, or pounding; worse with physical activity
    Photophobia
    Phonophobia
    Postdrome:
    Exhaustion
    Euphoria
    Muscle weakness
    Change in appetite

ความคิดเห็น • 1

  • @ashleigh3233
    @ashleigh3233 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Is this the same pathophysiology that vestibular migraine uses?