[Review] Insights into migraine attacks from neuroimaging

AI Summary

Migraine is a neurological disease with significant social and personal consequences. Neuroimaging studies have revealed that specific brain areas are involved in the various phases of migraine, contributing to the onset of pain and associated symptoms.

Migraine is one of the most common neurological diseases and it has a huge social and personal impact. Although head pain is the core symptom, individuals with migraine can have a plethora of non-headache symptoms that precede, accompany, or follow the pain. Neuroimaging studies have shown that the involvement of specific brain areas can explain many of the symptoms reported during the different phases of migraine. Recruitment of the hypothalamus, pons, spinal trigeminal nucleus, thalamus, and visual and pain-processing cortical areas starts during the premonitory phase and persists through the headache phase, contributing to the onset of pain and associated symptoms.

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