Migraine prodromes and migraine triggers

Abstract

Migraine is characterized by a well-defined premonitory phase occurring hours or even days before the headache. Also, many migraineurs report typical triggers for their headaches. Triggers, however, are not consistent in their ability to precipitate migraine headaches. When looking at the clinical characteristics of both premonitory symptoms and triggers, a shared pathophysiological basis seems evident. Both seem to have their origin in basic homeostatic networks such as the feeding/fasting, the sleeping/waking, and the stress response network, all of which strongly rely on the hypothalamus as a hub of integration and are densely interconnected. They also influence the trigeminal pain processing system. Additionally, thalamic and hormonal mechanisms are involved. Activity within all those networks is influenced by various endogenous and external factors and might even cyclically change dependent on physiological internal rhythms. This might affect the threshold for the generation of migraine headaches. Premonitory symptoms thus appear as the result of an already ongoing alteration within those networks, whereas triggers might in this special situation only be able to further stress the system over the threshold for attack generation as catalysts of a process already in motion.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationMigraine Biology, Diagnosis, and Co-Morbidities
EditorsJerry W. Swanson, Manjit Matharu
REQUIRED books only: Number of pages14
Volume198
PublisherElsevier BV
Publication date2023
Edition1
Pages135-148
ISBN (Print)978-0-12-823356-6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

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PubMed 38043958