Scientists discover an important cause of migraine headaches

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In a new study from the University of Maine, researchers found that people who experience migraines are prone to a brain energy deficit between attacks, whether through increased demand or inadequate energy production.

They found that an energy impairment may cause brain oxidative stress, triggering a migraine as a protective response.

This analysis sheds light on why migraines occur and helps explain how a migraine aura is kindled and propagates, and why migraines tend to improve as individuals age.

The team characterizes migraines as a homeostatic response set in motion by oxidant-sensing switches in the body that extrapolate individual neuronal metabolism to the entire brain.

When brain energy is inadequate, overproduction of oxidants, which are mild toxins, is stimulated.

The team hypothesizes that oxidant buildup alerts the brain to the energy imbalance, and elicits the migraine attack as a corrective response.

While brain energy deficits have been observed in individuals prone to migraines, the mechanism that triggers an attack based on energy imbalance in the brain was not previously understood.

According to the researchers, the human brain balances the level of antioxidant defense with the amount of energy produced and vice versa, to create a tightly regulated cycle that maintains energy production and cellular redox potential in a narrow optimal range.

The oxidative stress created by the energy imbalance linked to migraine threatens neuronal viability in the short term and is suspected as a cause of neurodegenerative disease in the long term.

The team demonstrates that energy deficiency creates oxidative stress as an inherent feature of cellular metabolism.

This stress induces migraines in susceptible individuals via oxidant-sensing ion channels in the pain receptors sited in the membrane that covers the brain.

The brain’s response to migraine attacks includes reducing brain energy demands, increasing mitochondrial biogenesis, suppressing apoptosis, releasing varied growth factors, stimulating neurogenesis, reducing the production of reactive oxidative species and raising the level of antioxidant defense.

These protective mechanisms, which seek to balance energy production and demand in the brain, suggest that the migraine attack is itself a corrective process initiated to protect the brain from oxidative stress and energy imbalance.

The implication is that new migraine prevention therapies that treat brain energy deficit and oxidative stress simultaneously will likely be more effective than those that target either separately.

If you care about migraine headaches, please read studies about migraine headache linked to high blood pressure in older women and findings of this drug may help prevent migraine headache.

For more information about migraine and your health, please see recent studies about newer migraine drugs may bring you relief and results showing that a green light therapy could help reduce migraine headache.

The study is published in Neurochemical Research. One author of the study is Jonathan Borkum.

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