避免或寻求光-一项随机交叉fMRI研究调查偏头痛畏光症的对立治疗策略。

Eva Matt, Tuna Aslan, Ahmad Amini, Kardelen Sariçiçek, Stefan Seidel, Paul Martin, Christian Wöber, Roland Beisteiner
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引用次数: 3

摘要

背景:畏光,对光的敏感性异常增加,是偏头痛患者的常见症状,光线不适经常被发现是偏头痛发作的诱因。在行为学研究中,有计划地暴露在光线下可以减轻有畏光的偏头痛患者的头痛,可能是通过增加对这种偏头痛诱因的习惯。在这里,我们旨在利用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)阐明偏头痛患者光暴露与光剥夺的神经生理机制。方法:10例偏头痛患者(女性9例,年龄28.70±8.18岁)和11例健康对照(女性9例,年龄23.73±2.24岁),采用交叉设计,连续7天暴露于闪光(Flash)或黑暗(Dark)环境1小时,洗脱期3个月。研究参与者记录日记,包括干预前7天、干预期间和干预后7天的间歇期和急性期畏光、头痛的存在和严重程度。在这两种干预的前一周和后一天,在一个块设计中使用闪烁光的功能磁共振成像。在全脑水平上分析功能激活,并利用初始振幅估计和校正的习惯化斜率对视觉皮层(V1)的习惯化进行建模。结果:在两种干预措施后,平均间隔期畏光减少,但相对于基线的差异在多次比较中没有校正。在基线时,与对照组相比,闪烁光诱导的V1激活在患者中较高,但在Flash和Dark干预后激活恢复正常。V1习惯化指数与头痛频次、头痛严重程度和急性畏光相关。在闪动条件下,个体头痛频率相对于基线的变化与习惯化斜率相对于基线的变化几乎完全对应。结论:平均而言,光照并没有导致症状缓解,这可能是由于干预时间短以及患者对干预反应的高度可变性。然而,视觉皮层习惯化与头痛症状之间的密切关系以及光照射对其的调节可能为暴露治疗效果的神经生理学基础提供了线索。试验注册:NCT05369910(05/06/2022,回顾性注册)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Avoid or seek light - a randomized crossover fMRI study investigating opposing treatment strategies for photophobia in migraine.

Avoid or seek light - a randomized crossover fMRI study investigating opposing treatment strategies for photophobia in migraine.

Avoid or seek light - a randomized crossover fMRI study investigating opposing treatment strategies for photophobia in migraine.

Avoid or seek light - a randomized crossover fMRI study investigating opposing treatment strategies for photophobia in migraine.

Background: Photophobia, the aberrantly increased sensitivity to light, is a common symptom in migraine patients and light discomfort is frequently found as a trigger for migraine attacks. In behavioral studies, planned exposure to light was found to reduce headache in migraine patients with photophobia, potentially by increasing habituation to this migraine trigger. Here, we aimed to elucidate neurophysiological mechanisms of light exposure versus light deprivation in migraine patients using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).

Methods: Ten migraine patients (9 female, age = 28.70 ± 8.18 years) and 11 healthy controls (9 female, age = 23.73 ± 2.24 years) spent one hour on 7 consecutive days exposed to flashing light (Flash) or darkness (Dark) using a crossover design with a wash-out period of 3 months. Study participants kept a diary including items on interictal and ictal photophobia, presence and severity of headache 7 days before, during and 7 days after the interventions. One week before and one day after both interventions, fMRI using flickering light in a block design was applied. Functional activation was analyzed at whole-brain level and habituation of the visual cortex (V1) was modeled with the initial amplitude estimate and the corrected habituation slope.

Results: Mean interictal photophobia decreased after both interventions, but differences relative to the baseline did not survive correction for multiple comparisons. At baseline, flickering light induced activation in V1 was higher in the patients compared to the controls, but activation normalized after the Flash and the Dark interventions. V1 habituation indices correlated with headache frequency, headache severity and ictal photophobia. In the Flash condition, the individual change of headache frequency relative to the baseline corresponded almost perfectly to the change of the habituation slope compared to the baseline.

Conclusions: On average, light exposure did not lead to symptom relief, potentially due to the short duration of the intervention and the high variability of the patients' responses to the intervention. However, the strong relationship between visual cortex habituation and headache symptoms and its modulation by light exposure might shed light on the neurophysiological basis of exposure treatment effects.

Trial registration: NCT05369910 (05/06/2022, retrospectively registered).

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