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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fluctuation
of estrogen levels across the menstrual cycle influences migraine headache. In this study, 53 women documented prospectively the incidence and severity of
headache
daily for an average of three menstrual cycles. Seven of the women met the criteria established by the International
Headache
Society for migraine with or without aura, while the remaining 46 women failed to do so. Chi-square analysis revealed that, overall, the incidence of non-migraine headache was dependent on day of the cycle (chi 2 [1,66] = 247.7, p < 0.001), with more
headaches
occurring during the perimenstrual phase. The 46 women without migraine were further classified according to NIMH criteria into PMS (n = 26) and non-PMS groups (n = 20). An association between
headache
and menstrual cycle phase was noted for both groups (p < 0.001), although the incidence of severe
headache
was greater for the PMS women, during both the perimenstrual and intermenstrual phases. Both groups experienced an increase in severe
headaches
during the perimenstrual phase. The PMS women peaked on the day prior to menstruation, while the non-PMS women peaked on the first day of menstruation. There did not appear to be an overall difference in the reporting of mild
headache
across the cycle between women with or without PMS.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Cephalalgia
1992 Dec
PMID:Non-migraine headache across the menstrual cycle in women with and without premenstrual syndrome. 147 37
Increased, decreased or normal excitability to transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) has been reported in the motor (M1) and visual cortices of patients with migraine. Light deprivation (LD) has been reported to modulate M1 excitability in control subjects (CS). Still, effects of LD on M1 excitability compared to exposure to environmental light exposure (EL) had not been previously described in patients with migraine (MP). To further our knowledge about differences between CS and MP, regarding M1 excitability and effects of LD on M1 excitability, we opted for a novel approach by extending measurement conditions. We measured motor thresholds (MTs) to TMS, short-interval intracortical inhibition, and ratios between motor-evoked potential amplitudes and supramaximal M responses in MP and CS on two different days, before and after LD or EL. Motor thresholds significantly increased in MP in LD and EL sessions, and remained stable in CS. There were no significant between-group differences in other measures of TMS. Short-term variation of MTs was greater in MP compared to CS.
Fluctuation
in excitability over hours or days in MP is an issue that, until now, has been relatively neglected. The results presented here will help to reconcile conflicting observations.
J
Headache
Pain 2012 Jan
PMID:Increased variability of motor cortical excitability to transcranial magnetic stimulation in migraine: a new clue to an old enigma. 2188 5