Affiliation:
1. Department of Neurological Sciences, “La Spaienza” University, Rome, Italy
Abstract
Oculosympathetic function was studied in 20 headache-free migraine patients and in 20 controls. Pupillary investigation was performed under basal conditions, and after instillation of tyramine (2%) and phenylephrine (1%) eyedrops. Each test was performed twice shortly after a spontaneous attack and then repeated after 7 and 15 days. In the patients, the normal mydriatic response induced by tyramine was significantly ( p< 0.001) reduced and phenylephrine instillation caused a significant ( p< 0.01) pupillary dilatation in both the assessments performed shortly after the attack. These abnormal responses were bilateral in all patients and slightly anisocoric in some. They were significantly ( p< 0.001) more pronounced in the patients who had pain and pronounced vascular features. The reduced oculosympathetic response to tyramine, as well as the hypersensitivity to phenylephrine, was less evident 7 days after the attack and absent after 15 days. A transient and bilateral post-ganglionic oculosympathetic hypofunction, with adrenoceptor hypersensitivity, was found to be temporally related to the migraine attack, regardless of the side or predominant side of pain.
Subject
Clinical Neurology,General Medicine
Cited by
24 articles.
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