Articles: vasodilation.
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The pathogenesis of migraine aura, like migraine, remains unclear. The probable cause of migraine aura may be cortical spreading depression (CSD) and cerebral hypoperfusion. ⋯ The focal symptoms during migraine aura may be due to transient constriction of a cerebral artery and headache can result from a sterile inflammatory reaction around the walls of dilated cranial vessels. The development of aura makes a vascular origin a remote possibility, while a primary disturbance of cortical neuron function, probably CSD and activation of the trigeminovascular system, is a more reasonable explanation.
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Review Case Reports
Concomitant ectatic posterior communicating artery and tentorial meningioma as a source of oculomotor palsy: case report.
Although non-aneurysmal vascular compression of the oculomotor nerve is rare, it should be considered in the evaluation of unilateral oculomotor palsy. ⋯ Only one other report describes MVD of the third nerve from PComA compression. A review is presented of MVD carried out for similar cases of non-aneurysmal vascular compression of the oculomotor nerve. By analogy from cases in which an aneurysm is the compressing vascular structure, prompt surgical treatment is advocated. Complete evaluation of an isolated third nerve palsy should include MRI sequences designed to detect vascular compression of cranial nerves.
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For more than a century neurogenic inflammation has been proposed to have a role in various human diseases. The present review will cover the conceptual steps of the itinerary that has led to the conclusion that neurogenic inflammation is important in migraine. Of particular relevance for the object of this article is the observation that tachykin-independent neurogenic inflammatory responses are evident in rodents, but much less pronounced or absent in other mammal species, including man, whereas neurogenic vasodilatation, most likely mediated by CGRP, occurs in most mammalian species and also in man. Recent evidence that a CGRP receptor antagonist was effective in the treatment of migraine attack supports the hypothesis that neurogenic vasodilatation is a major underlying mechanism of migraine.