Objectives.-To review conjectured modes of action of migraine triggers and to present a new hypothesis about them. Background.-Migraine attacks are initiated in many migraineurs by a variety of "triggers," although in some patients no external trigger can be identified. Many triggers provoke attacks with such a short latency that only some kind of neural mechanism can explain the triggering.Results.-We present here a hypothesis that the pain of migraine has its ultimate origin in the cortex, but that the immediate generator is in the brainstem. Our hypothesis is that most migraines have triggers that produce excitation of cortical neurons and that this directly causes withdrawal of descending sensory inhibition originating in the brainstem. A wide range of evidence from the literature that cortical activation induced by a number of different mechanisms often produces headache is presented to support this notion. Several nuclei in the brainstem appear to participate in the selective control of trigeminovascular sensation through descending inhibitory mechanisms that arise in the cortex. In this review we focus on 2 of them, the periaqueductal gray matter and nucleus raphe magnus. Our own past results and those of others show that this inhibition is specific for craniovascular sensation and involves the neurotransmitter 5-hydroxytryptamine. Finally, we summarize our own recent experiments, which show that cortical activation by migraine triggers (including cortical spreading depression) inhibits neuronal discharge in the brainstem and facilitates trigeminovascular sensation.
Conclusion.-If the hypothesis can be proven and the neurotransmitters involved in the hypothetical trigger pathway can be identified, it may be possible to develop novel migraine preventative therapies.Key words: migraine, migraine trigger, cerebral cortex, brainstem, trigeminovascular sensory system Abbreviations: 5-HT 5-hydroxytryptamine, CGRP calcitonin gene-related peptide, CSD cortical spreading depression, DC direct current, ECT electroconvulsive therapy, LC locus coeruleus, NO nitric oxide, NRM nucleus raphe magnus, NTS nucleus tractus solitarius, PAG periaqueductal gray matter, PET positron emission tomography, SP substance P, TMS transcranial magnetic stimulation (Headache 2009;49:253-275) In this review, we present the hypothesis that most migraines have triggers that produce excitation of cortical neurons and that this excitation directly inhibits neurons in 2 brainstem nuclei: the periaqueductal gray matter (PAG) and the nucleus raphe magnus (NRM). These nuclei then release their ongoing descending control of dura mater sensation in the trigeminal nucleus and cause normal sensory traffic from the dura to be perceived as migraine pain.Migraine is one of our most common and debilitating organic diseases, yet bafflingly has no apparent pathology. It is a condition involving the "trigeminovascular system," in which the cranial vasculature, the trigeminal sensory system, and the central nervous system all play a part. Its cardinal fe...