Spreading depolarization may link migraine and stroke
- PMID: 24913618
- DOI: 10.1111/head.12386
Spreading depolarization may link migraine and stroke
Abstract
Migraine increases the risk of stroke, particularly in young and otherwise healthy adults. Being the most frequent neurological condition, migraine prevalence is on a par with that of other common stroke risk factors, such as diabetes or hypertension. Several patterns of association have emerged: (1) migraine and stroke share a common association (eg, vasculopathies, patent foramen ovale, or pulmonary A-V malformations); (2) injury to the arterial wall such as acute arterial dissections can present as migraine aura attacks or stroke; (3) strokes rarely develop during a migraine attack, as described for "migrainous stroke." Increasing experimental evidence suggests that cerebral hyperexcitability and enhanced susceptibility to spreading depolarization, the electrophysiologic event underlying migraine, may serve as a mechanism underlying the migraine-stroke association. Mice carrying human vascular or neuronal migraine mutations exhibit an enhanced susceptibility to spreading depolarization while being particularly vulnerable to cerebral ischemia. The severe stroke phenotype in migraine mutant mice can be prevented by suppressing spreading depolarization. If confirmed in the clinical setting, inhibiting spreading depolarization might protect migraineurs at stroke risk as well as decrease attacks of migraine.
Keywords: aura; cerebral autosomal arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy; familial hemiplegic migraine; migraine; spreading depolarization; stroke.
© 2014 American Headache Society.
Comment in
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Spreading depolarization may link migraine, stroke, and other cardiovascular disease.Headache. 2015 Jan;55(1):180-2. doi: 10.1111/head.12436. Epub 2014 Aug 28. Headache. 2015. PMID: 25163584 No abstract available.
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Migraine, Chronic Vasculopathies, and Spreading Depolarization.Headache. 2016 Mar;56(3):580-3. doi: 10.1111/head.12753. Headache. 2016. PMID: 26995707 No abstract available.
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