Abstract

Lack of habituation is the most reproducible interictal neurophysiological phenomenon in episodic migraine. The aim of this study is to evaluate the habituation phenomenon by examining the nociceptive blink reflex in patients with episodic migraine. We conducted a cross-sectional observational case-control study. Patients with episodic migraine were selected consecutively and studied during the interictal phase. The nociceptive blink reflex was examined and a study was conducted comparing symmetry, analysis of the Euclidean distances and assessment of latency prolongation between stimulation blocks. Thirty-one patients and 16 healthy controls were included, their mean ages being 32.25 and 32.35 years, respectively. The controls displayed left-right symmetry. The Euclidean and Manhattan distances showed that the means of the block latencies of the groups are different and increase according to the number of blocks being compared. The means of the block latencies do not differ significantly in the migraine patient group, in contrast to what is seen in the healthy group. Habituation deficit was observed in the interictal phase in patients with episodic migraine compared to controls, as measured by the absence of latency prolongation in the nociceptive blink reflex.

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