5 research outputs found

    Clinical details and migraine history.

    No full text
    <p>Abbreviations: Age, age in years; Sex, male (M)/female(F); Age at onset, age the headaches started in years; Frequency, number of attacks per month (median values are given in brackets); Duration, duration of illness in years; Side, dominant side of headache pain, left(L)/right(R); Allodynia, patients reporting at least one type of skin hypersensivity during migraine.</p

    Primary Somatosensory Cortices Contain Altered Patterns of Regional Cerebral Blood Flow in the Interictal Phase of Migraine - Fig 3

    No full text
    <p><b>(A)</b> Migraine-related increase of rCBF in the primary somatosensory cortices. Dotted black lines correspond to the boundary of central sulcus (CS) and post-central sulcus (PoCS). Statistical images are displayed with a cluster probability threshold of P<0.05, corrected for multiple comparisons (FWE). Data are shown in Caret PALS space, with left/right orientations marked. <b>(B)</b> Magnitude of the CBF changes within S1. Plots represent the mean (red line), 95% confidence interval (light-grey region), and 1 standard deviation (dark-grey region). Individual subjects data are shown in blue. Both groups are normally distributed, and significant after independent two-sample T-test (p = 0.0021).</p

    Correlations between rCBF and clinical reported variables.

    No full text
    <p><b>(A)</b> Headache frequency (which was positively correlated with CBF in S1). <b>(B)</b> Total number of cutaneous allodynia (CA) symptoms during migraine, <b>(C)</b> Duration of illness, and <b>(D)</b> Age of the patients.</p

    Comparison of evoked vs. spontaneous tics in a patient with trigeminal neuralgia (tic doloureux)-1

    No full text
    <p><b>Copyright information:</b></p><p>Taken from "Comparison of evoked vs. spontaneous tics in a patient with trigeminal neuralgia (tic doloureux)"</p><p>http://www.molecularpain.com/content/3/1/34</p><p>Molecular Pain 2007;3():34-34.</p><p>Published online 6 Nov 2007</p><p>PMCID:PMC2217520.</p><p></p>al regions including anterior cingulate (ACC), insula (Ins), middle and inferior frontal (MFG, IFG), medial temporal gyrus (MTG) and inferior parietal lobe (IPL) regions show significant activation (P < 0.0001). Subcortical regions showing significant activation include the thalamus (Thal) and pontine nuclei (PN). Notably, no significant activation was observed in the cerebellum (see text). Numbers indicated the anterior posterior, sagittal or horizontal plane of the brain slice. R = Right and L = Left

    Comparison of evoked vs. spontaneous tics in a patient with trigeminal neuralgia (tic doloureux)-3

    No full text
    <p><b>Copyright information:</b></p><p>Taken from "Comparison of evoked vs. spontaneous tics in a patient with trigeminal neuralgia (tic doloureux)"</p><p>http://www.molecularpain.com/content/3/1/34</p><p>Molecular Pain 2007;3():34-34.</p><p>Published online 6 Nov 2007</p><p>PMCID:PMC2217520.</p><p></p> Ins – Insula; Amy – amygdala; Thal – thalamus; PN – pontine nuclei. R – right; L – left; P – posterior; A – anterior
    corecore