Lauritzen M
Department of General Physiology and Biophysics, Panum Institute, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
Acta Neurol Scand Suppl. 1987;113:1-40.
Migraine is a common disease which expresses itself by paroxysmal headache, commonly accompanied by transient neurological symptoms. There are at the moment two important theories concerning the cerebral mechanisms of migraine: The vascular theory which attributes migraine to spasm of a cerebral artery causing local hypoxia and transient focal symptoms followed by neurogenically mediated extra- and/or intracranial vasodilation causing headache, i.e. migraine is understood in terms of a primary perturbation of blood vessel function. Another, but neglected viewpoint relates migraine to a paroxysmal, transient depolarization of primarily cortical neurones causing transient focal symptoms and headache, i.e. migraine is understood in terms of a primary perturbance of neuronal function. This review summarizes clinical and experimental studies concerning these two theories with special emphasis on classic migraine, i.e. paroxysmal headache accompanied by focal symptoms of short duration. At begin of the classic migraine attack regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) declines in the posterior part of the brain. Subsequently the hypoperfused region expands anteriorly, independent of the territories of supply of the large cerebral arteries. This observation speaks clearly against reduced perfusion as consequence of arterial spasm. The rate of spread of the reduced perfusion is about 2 mm/min and the changes of perfusion appear to follow the cortex corresponding to the convexities. Tests of regulation of rCBF show normal blood pressure autoregulation, but reduced responsiveness to change of arterial carbon dioxide tension and in response to mental activation. These observations are consistent with arteriolar vasoconstriction as cause of reduced perfusion. Vascular tone at the arteriolar level is, however, mainly determined by local factors, and change of local neuronal function could therefore be the basis of increased arteriolar tone and reduced rCBF. Analysis of the time course of perfusion reduction and symptoms reveals that perfusion frequently declines before the patient experiences any focal symptoms. The focal symptoms frequently start after spread of the hypoperfusion has begun, but usually ceases altogether within another 30 minutes, while the reduced perfusion persists for a couple of hours, when the patient suffers from headache. This temporal relationship between symptoms and rCBF changes precludes that the focal symptoms are secondary to reduced rCBF. Furthermore, migraine headache is not related to increased rCBF. On this background the acute migraine attack can hardly be explained by a primary arterial vasospasm.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
偏头痛是一种常见疾病,表现为阵发性头痛,通常伴有短暂的神经症状。目前有两种关于偏头痛脑机制的重要理论:血管理论认为偏头痛是由脑动脉痉挛导致局部缺氧和短暂的局灶性症状,随后由神经介导的颅外和/或颅内血管扩张引起头痛,即偏头痛被理解为血管功能的原发性紊乱。另一种但被忽视的观点将偏头痛与主要是皮质神经元的阵发性、短暂去极化联系起来,导致短暂的局灶性症状和头痛,即偏头痛被理解为神经元功能的原发性紊乱。这篇综述总结了关于这两种理论的临床和实验研究,特别强调经典偏头痛,即伴有短暂局灶性症状的阵发性头痛。在经典偏头痛发作开始时,脑后部的局部脑血流量(rCBF)下降。随后,灌注不足区域向前扩展,与大脑大动脉的供血区域无关。这一观察结果明确反对动脉痉挛导致灌注减少。灌注减少的扩散速度约为2毫米/分钟,灌注变化似乎与对应于脑凸面的皮质一致。rCBF调节测试显示血压自动调节正常,但对动脉二氧化碳张力变化和精神激活的反应性降低。这些观察结果与小动脉血管收缩导致灌注减少一致。然而,小动脉水平的血管张力主要由局部因素决定,因此局部神经元功能的变化可能是小动脉张力增加和rCBF减少的基础。对灌注减少和症状的时间进程分析表明,在患者出现任何局灶性症状之前,灌注经常下降。局灶性症状通常在灌注不足扩散开始后出现,但通常在另外30分钟内完全停止,而灌注减少持续数小时,此时患者患有头痛。症状与rCBF变化之间的这种时间关系排除了局灶性症状是rCBF减少的继发结果。此外,偏头痛性头痛与rCBF增加无关。在此背景下,急性偏头痛发作很难用原发性动脉血管痉挛来解释。(摘要截取自400字)