Background: The high comorbidity of migraine and depression is suggestive of shared risk factors or common mechanisms between the two diseases. In individuals with a depressive disorder, there is a high prevalence of altered midbrain raphe (MBR) echogenicity, detectable via transcranial sonography (TCS), that is suggested to be linked with a dysfunction of the serotoninergic system. In patients with migraine, this alteration has seldom been explored in earlier studies, and conclusions are often lacking. Our study aimed to elucidate whether this alteration is specific to migraine and to determine whether it is related with depression. Methods: This study enrolled patients with migraine ( n = 100, 72% female) and patients with tension-type headache disorders (TTH) ( n = 62, 78.5% female) from a headache clinic. In addition, 79 healthy subjects (79.7% female) were recruited as controls. All participants underwent a standard interview to evaluate headache information and an interview with psychiatrists for depression evaluation. TCS examinations were performed on all participants. Results: Patients with migraine had a higher rate of MBR hypoechogenicity (28%) compared with that of healthy controls (15.2%) and that of patients with TTH (12.9%). In patients with migraine, reduced MBR echogenicity was associated with depressive symptoms assessed using the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D). No association between migraine self-medication and MBR echogenicity was found. Conclusion: Reduced-echoic MBR detected by TCS is prevalent in migraine patients and is associated with depressive symptoms. TCS-detected hypoechogenic MBR abnormality could be an imaging biomarker of depressive symptoms in patients with migraine.
The third ventricle is a narrow, funnel-shaped, unilocular, midline cavity located between the 2 thalami, under the body of the lateral ventricle, in the center of the head. Damaging of brain tissue in the third ventricle when conducting operation under the microscope will lead to serious consequence. The study aimed to precisely detect the relative location of specific structures on the approach to the third ventricle. The authors rebuilt a 3-dimensional reconstruction of the brain and selected specific sections and then measured several crucial distance, angle to precisely assure the approaching pathway and localize the hypothalamic sulcus, interthalamic adhesion, anterior commissure, optic chiasm, and pineal body. In the study, canthomeatal line was used as base line to measure angle. Parameters were obtained from 58 samples (22 males and 36 females) between 21 and 76 years old. Means and standard deviation were calculated as well as the 95% confidence interval for the mean value of the measured data. The data were analyzed by SPSS, statistical software with the comparison between sexes and sides. The results could be reference for clinical and anatomic utilities.
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