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Cortical Hyper‐Excitability in Migraine in Response to Chromatic Patterns
Author(s) -
Haigh Sarah M.,
Chamanzar Alireza,
Grover Pulkit,
Behrmann Marlene
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
headache: the journal of head and face pain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.14
H-Index - 119
eISSN - 1526-4610
pISSN - 0017-8748
DOI - 10.1111/head.13620
Subject(s) - chromaticity , migraine , hue , psychology , chromatic scale , audiology , autism , neuroscience , medicine , developmental psychology , optics , psychiatry , physics
Objective Individuals with migraine exhibit heightened sensitivity to visual input that continues beyond their migraine episodes. However, the contribution of color to visual sensitivity, and how it relates to neural activity, has largely been unexplored in these individuals. Background Previously, it has been shown that, in non‐migraine individuals, patterns with greater chromaticity separation evoked greater cortical activity, regardless of hue, even when colors were isoluminant. Therefore, to investigate whether individuals with migraine experienced increased visual sensitivity, we compared the behavioral and neural responses to chromatic patterns of increasing separation in migraine and non‐migraine individuals. Methods Seventeen individuals with migraine (12 with aura) and 18 headache‐free controls viewed pairs of colored horizontal grating patterns that varied in chromaticity separation. Color pairs were either blue‐green, red‐green, or red‐blue. Participants rated the discomfort of the gratings and electroencephalogram was recorded simultaneously. Results Both groups showed increased discomfort ratings and larger N1/N2 event‐related potentials (ERPs) with greater chromaticity separation, which is consistent with increased cortical excitability. However, individuals with migraine rated gratings as being disproportionately uncomfortable and exhibited greater effects of chromaticity separation in ERP amplitude across occipital and parietal electrodes. Ratings of discomfort and ERPs were smaller in response to the blue‐green color pairs than the red‐green and red‐blue gratings, but this was to an equivalent degree across the 2 groups. Conclusions Together, these findings indicate that greater chromaticity separation increases neural excitation, and that this effect is heightened in migraine, consistent with the theory that hyper‐excitability of the visual system is a key signature of migraine.

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