Migraine is a primary headache characterized by recurrent attacks of head pain associated with nausea or vomit, photophobia, phonophobia and osmophobia. The presence of osmophobia during migraine attacks seems to be a very specific complaint. Cutaneous allodynia (CA) is very common in migraineurs, and it is the most evident clinical manifestation of central sensitization, a mechanism involved in migraine chronification. This study was aimed at identifying the possible correlation between osmophobia and CA in migraineurs. 673 migraineurs were studied (492 episodic, 181 chronic). The prevalence of both CA and osmophobia was higher in chronic than in episodic migraineurs. The association between these two symptoms was significant in chronic migraineurs at Chi square test. The highlighted relationship between CA and osmophobia may be interpreted in different ways: central sensitization induced by recurrent pain stimulation may in parallel induce a distortion of both cutaneous sensitivity (CA) and olfaction (osmophobia); alternatively, the recurrent olfactory stimulation in subjects with a hypersensitivity to olfactory stimuli may co-work with repetitive pain stimulation to induce the central sensitization process.
Migraineurs brain is hyper-excitable and hypo-metabolic. Dreaming is a mental state characterized by hallucinatory features in which imagery, emotion, motor skills and memory are created de novo. To evaluate dreams in different kinds of headache. We included 219 controls; 148 migraineurs (66 with aura-MA, 82 without aura-MO); 45 tension type headache (TTH) patients. ICHD-II diagnostic criteria were used. Ad hoc questionnaire was used to evaluate oneiric activity. The Generalized Anxiety Disorder Questionnaire, and the Patient Health Questionnaire were administered to evaluate anxiety and mood. The prevalence of dreamers was similar in different groups. Frequency of visual and auditory dreams was not different between groups. Migraineurs, particularly MA, had an increased frequency of taste dreams (present in 19.6 % of controls, 40.9 % of MA, 23.2 % of MO, 11.1 % of TTH, p < 0.01), and of olfactory dreams (present in 20 % of controls, 36 % of MA, 35 % of MO and 20 % of TTH, p < 0.01). Anxiety and mood did not influence these results. The increased frequency of taste and olfactory dreams among migraineurs seems to be specific, possibly reflecting a particular sensitivity of gustative and olfactory brain structures, as suggested by osmofobia and nausea, typical of migraine. This may suggest the role of some cerebral structures, such as amygdala and hypothalamus, which are known to be involved in migraine mechanisms as well in the biology of sleep and dreaming.
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