The Journal of Headache and Pain (Nov 2019)

Functional connectivity studies in migraine: what have we learned?

  • Kirill Skorobogatykh,
  • Willem Sebastiaan van Hoogstraten,
  • Diana Degan,
  • Anastasia Prischepa,
  • Anastasya Savitskaya,
  • Biondo Michela Ileen,
  • Enrico Bentivegna,
  • Iaroslav Skiba,
  • Laura D’Acunto,
  • Livia Ferri,
  • Simona Sacco,
  • Jakob Møller Hansen,
  • Faisal Mohammad Amin,
  • European Headache Federation School of Advanced Studies (EHF-SAS)

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s10194-019-1047-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background Resting-state functional connectivity (FC) MRI has widely been used to understand migraine pathophysiology and to identify an imaging marker of the disorder. Here, we review what we have learned from FC studies. Methods We performed a literature search on the PubMed website for original articles reporting data obtained from conventional resting-state FC recording in migraine patients compared with healthy controls or during and outside of migraine attacks in the same patients. Results We found 219 articles and included 28 in this review after screening for inclusion and exclusion criteria. Twenty-five studies compared migraine patients with healthy controls, whereas three studies investigated migraine patients during and outside of attacks. In the studies of interictal migraine more alterations of more than 20 FC networks (including amygdala, caudate nucleus, central executive, cerebellum, cuneus, dorsal attention network, default mode, executive control, fronto-parietal, hypothalamus, insula, neostriatum, nucleus accumbens, occipital lobe, periaqueductal grey, prefrontal cortex, salience, somatosensory cortex I, thalamus and visual) were reported. We found a poor level of reproducibility and no migraine specific pattern across these studies. Conclusion Based on the findings in the present review, it seems very difficult to extract knowledge of migraine pathophysiology or to identify a biomarker of migraine. There is an unmet need of guidelines for resting-state FC studies in migraine, which promote the use of homogenous terminology, public availability of protocol and the a priori hypothesis in line with for instance randomized clinical trial guidelines.

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