Stroke, Vol 24, 1335-1338, Copyright © 1993 by American Heart Association
CP Zwetsloot, JF Caekebeke and MD Ferrari
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: A recent transcranial Doppler study found reduced
blood velocity in seven patients during migraine attacks in the middle
cerebral artery at the headache side. This would implicate vasodilation of
the middle cerebral artery in the pathogenesis of headache in migraine. We
attempted to confirm this finding. METHODS: We determined blood velocity
with transcranial Doppler ultrasonography in the middle cerebral arteries
of 51 migraine patients with unilateral headache (5 with aura, 46 without
aura) and of 14 patients with bilateral headache, during and outside
attacks. During attacks, median time from onset of attack to transcranial
Doppler examination was 6 hours (range, 1 to 35 hours). RESULTS: We found
no difference between blood velocity at the headache and nonheadache sides
nor between blood velocity during and outside attacks. Similar results were
obtained in a subgroup of 11 patients who were investigated in the first 4
hours of an attack. There were also no differences between attacks with
unilateral or bilateral headache. CONCLUSIONS: We cannot support the
hypothesis that migraine is associated with vasodilation of the middle
cerebral artery ipsilateral to the headache.
ARTICLES
Lack of asymmetry of middle cerebral artery blood velocity in unilateral migraine
Department of Neurology, University Hospital, Leiden, The Netherlands.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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G. G. Schoonman, J. van der Grond, C. Kortmann, R. J. van der Geest, G. M. Terwindt, and M. D. Ferrari Migraine headache is not associated with cerebral or meningeal vasodilatation--a 3T magnetic resonance angiography study Brain, August 1, 2008; 131(8): 2192 - 2200. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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