The middle meningeal artery is a proposed surrogate marker for activation of trigeminal nociceptors during migraine. Previous studies focused on the extracranial part of the artery; hence,... Show moreThe middle meningeal artery is a proposed surrogate marker for activation of trigeminal nociceptors during migraine. Previous studies focused on the extracranial part of the artery; hence, vasoreactivity in the intradural arteries during migraine is unknown. Thirty-four patients with migraine without aura were given sildenafil on one day and calcitonin gene-related peptide on another in double-blind crossover fashion. Patients were scanned with 3.0 T MR angiography before drug administration and again 6 hours later during induced attacks of migraine. We measured circumference of the intradural segment of the middle meningeal artery before and during induced migraine attacks. The middle cerebral and superficial temporal arteries were also examined. Fourteen patients had attacks during the second scan after both study drugs and 11 had a migraine after either one or the other, resulting in a total of 39 attacks included in the final analysis. Mean circumference of the intradural middle meningeal artery at baseline was 3.18 mm with an increase of 0.11 mm during attacks (P = 0.005), corresponding to a relative dilation of 3.6% [95% CI: 1.4%-5.7%]. Middle cerebral artery dilated by 9.4% [95% CI: 7.1%-11.7%] and superficial temporal artery by 2.3% [95% CI: 0.2%-4.4%]. Our study shows that the intradural middle meningeal artery and the middle cerebral artery are dilated during migraine induced by calcitonin gene-related peptide as well as sildenafil. We propose that intradural vasculature is affected by migraine-driven activation of trigeminal afferents during migraine attacks. Show less
Christensen, C.E.; Younis, S.; Lindberg, U.; Boer, V.O.; Koning, P. de; Petersen, E.T.; ... ; Ashina, M. 2019
BackgroundSildenafil and calcitonin gene-related peptide both dilate the intradural segments of the middle meningeal artery measured with 3.0tesla (T) MR angiography. Here we hypothesized that an... Show moreBackgroundSildenafil and calcitonin gene-related peptide both dilate the intradural segments of the middle meningeal artery measured with 3.0tesla (T) MR angiography. Here we hypothesized that an increase in field strength to 7.0T and concomitant enhanced voxel resolution would lower variance in measurements of dilation in the intradural middle meningeal artery.MethodsFive subjects completed two sessions at respectively 3.0T and 7.0T. Each session comprised MR angiography scans once before and twice after administration of sildenafil, calcitonin gene-related peptide or placebo in a three-way, crossover, double-blind, placebo-controlled design.ResultsStandard deviations of arterial circumference revealed no difference between 3.0T and 7.0T measurements (p=0.379). We found a decrease in standard deviation from our original angiography analysis software (QMra) to a newer (LAVA) software package (p<0.001). Furthermore, we found that the dilation after sildenafil and calcitonin gene-related peptide were comparable between 3.0T and 7.0T.ConclusionsOur findings suggest no gain from the increase in voxel resolution but cemented dilatory findings from earlier. The implemented software update improved variance in circumference measurements in the intradural middle meningeal artery, which should be exploited in future studies.Trial registrationThe study is part of a parent study, which is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03143465). Show less