Functional brainstem representations of the human trigeminal cervical complex

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Functional brainstem representations of the human trigeminal cervical complex. / Mehnert, Jan; Basedau, Hauke; Sturm, Lisa-Marie; Nielsen, Trine; Jensen, Rigmor Højland; May, Arne.

in: CEPHALALGIA, Jahrgang 43, Nr. 5, 05.2023, S. 3331024231174862.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

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@article{9a2ef601684646e7a736c5355361b93f,
title = "Functional brainstem representations of the human trigeminal cervical complex",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: The human in-vivo functional somatotopy of the three branches of the trigeminal (V1, V2, V3) and greater occipital nerve in brainstem and also in thalamus and insula is still not well understood.METHODS: After preregistration (clinicaltrials.gov: NCT03999060), we mapped the functional representations of this trigemino-cervical complex non-invasively in 87 humans using high-resolution protocols for functional magnetic resonance imaging during painful electrical stimulation in two separate experiments. The imaging protocol and analysis was optimized for the lower brainstem and upper spinal cord, to identify activation of the spinal trigeminal nuclei. The stimulation protocol involved four electrodes which were positioned on the left side according to the three branches of the trigeminal nerve and the greater occipital nerve. The stimulation site was randomized and each site was repeated 10 times per session. The participants partook in three sessions resulting in 30 trials per stimulation site.RESULTS: We show a large overlap of peripheral dermatomes on brainstem representations and a somatotopic arrangement of the three branches of the trigeminal nerve along the perioral-periauricular axis and for the greater occipital nerve in brainstem below pons, as well as in thalamus, insula and cerebellum. The co-localization of greater occipital nerve with V1 along the lower part of brainstem is of particular interest since some headache patients profit from an anesthetic block of the greater occipital nerve.CONCLUSION: Our data provide anatomical evidence for a functional inter-inhibitory network between the trigeminal branches and greater occipital nerve in healthy humans as postulated in animal work. We further show that functional trigeminal representations intermingle perioral and periauricular facial dermatomes with individual branches of the trigeminal nerve in an onion shaped manner and overlap in a typical within-body-part somatotopic arrangement.Trial registration: clinicaltrials.gov: NCT03999060.",
keywords = "Animals, Humans, Brain Stem/diagnostic imaging, Headache, Pain, Trigeminal Nerve, Trigeminal Nucleus, Spinal",
author = "Jan Mehnert and Hauke Basedau and Lisa-Marie Sturm and Trine Nielsen and Jensen, {Rigmor H{\o}jland} and Arne May",
year = "2023",
month = may,
doi = "10.1177/03331024231174862",
language = "English",
volume = "43",
pages = "3331024231174862",
journal = "CEPHALALGIA",
issn = "0333-1024",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Functional brainstem representations of the human trigeminal cervical complex

AU - Mehnert, Jan

AU - Basedau, Hauke

AU - Sturm, Lisa-Marie

AU - Nielsen, Trine

AU - Jensen, Rigmor Højland

AU - May, Arne

PY - 2023/5

Y1 - 2023/5

N2 - BACKGROUND: The human in-vivo functional somatotopy of the three branches of the trigeminal (V1, V2, V3) and greater occipital nerve in brainstem and also in thalamus and insula is still not well understood.METHODS: After preregistration (clinicaltrials.gov: NCT03999060), we mapped the functional representations of this trigemino-cervical complex non-invasively in 87 humans using high-resolution protocols for functional magnetic resonance imaging during painful electrical stimulation in two separate experiments. The imaging protocol and analysis was optimized for the lower brainstem and upper spinal cord, to identify activation of the spinal trigeminal nuclei. The stimulation protocol involved four electrodes which were positioned on the left side according to the three branches of the trigeminal nerve and the greater occipital nerve. The stimulation site was randomized and each site was repeated 10 times per session. The participants partook in three sessions resulting in 30 trials per stimulation site.RESULTS: We show a large overlap of peripheral dermatomes on brainstem representations and a somatotopic arrangement of the three branches of the trigeminal nerve along the perioral-periauricular axis and for the greater occipital nerve in brainstem below pons, as well as in thalamus, insula and cerebellum. The co-localization of greater occipital nerve with V1 along the lower part of brainstem is of particular interest since some headache patients profit from an anesthetic block of the greater occipital nerve.CONCLUSION: Our data provide anatomical evidence for a functional inter-inhibitory network between the trigeminal branches and greater occipital nerve in healthy humans as postulated in animal work. We further show that functional trigeminal representations intermingle perioral and periauricular facial dermatomes with individual branches of the trigeminal nerve in an onion shaped manner and overlap in a typical within-body-part somatotopic arrangement.Trial registration: clinicaltrials.gov: NCT03999060.

AB - BACKGROUND: The human in-vivo functional somatotopy of the three branches of the trigeminal (V1, V2, V3) and greater occipital nerve in brainstem and also in thalamus and insula is still not well understood.METHODS: After preregistration (clinicaltrials.gov: NCT03999060), we mapped the functional representations of this trigemino-cervical complex non-invasively in 87 humans using high-resolution protocols for functional magnetic resonance imaging during painful electrical stimulation in two separate experiments. The imaging protocol and analysis was optimized for the lower brainstem and upper spinal cord, to identify activation of the spinal trigeminal nuclei. The stimulation protocol involved four electrodes which were positioned on the left side according to the three branches of the trigeminal nerve and the greater occipital nerve. The stimulation site was randomized and each site was repeated 10 times per session. The participants partook in three sessions resulting in 30 trials per stimulation site.RESULTS: We show a large overlap of peripheral dermatomes on brainstem representations and a somatotopic arrangement of the three branches of the trigeminal nerve along the perioral-periauricular axis and for the greater occipital nerve in brainstem below pons, as well as in thalamus, insula and cerebellum. The co-localization of greater occipital nerve with V1 along the lower part of brainstem is of particular interest since some headache patients profit from an anesthetic block of the greater occipital nerve.CONCLUSION: Our data provide anatomical evidence for a functional inter-inhibitory network between the trigeminal branches and greater occipital nerve in healthy humans as postulated in animal work. We further show that functional trigeminal representations intermingle perioral and periauricular facial dermatomes with individual branches of the trigeminal nerve in an onion shaped manner and overlap in a typical within-body-part somatotopic arrangement.Trial registration: clinicaltrials.gov: NCT03999060.

KW - Animals

KW - Humans

KW - Brain Stem/diagnostic imaging

KW - Headache

KW - Pain

KW - Trigeminal Nerve

KW - Trigeminal Nucleus, Spinal

U2 - 10.1177/03331024231174862

DO - 10.1177/03331024231174862

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 37203351

VL - 43

SP - 3331024231174862

JO - CEPHALALGIA

JF - CEPHALALGIA

SN - 0333-1024

IS - 5

ER -