Objective: A case-control study to investigate the effect of the menstrual cycle on trigeminal nerve- induced vasodilation in healthy women and patients with menstrually related migraine (MRM). Methods: Using a laser-Doppler imager, we compared the vasodilator effects of capsaicin application and electrical stimulation (ES) on the forehead skin, a trigeminal nerve-innervated dermatome, in premenopausal patients with MRM (n = 22), healthy controls (n = 20), and postmenopausal women without migraine (n = 22). Blood samples were collected for female sex hormone measurements. Results: Dermal blood flow(DBF) responses to capsaicinwere higher in controls during days 1-2 than during days 19-21 of their menstruation cycle (mean Emax ± SEM: 203 ± 28 AU vs 156 ± 27 AU [p5 0.031] for 0.06 mg/mL capsaicin and 497 ± 25 AU vs 456 ± 24 AU [p5 0.009] for 6.0mg/mL capsaicin). In contrast, patients with MRM demonstrated DBF responses without significant cycledependent variability (days 1-2 vs days 19-21: Emax 1486 20 AU vs 1546 20 AU [p = 0.788] for 0.06 mg/mL capsaicin and 470 ± 17 AU vs 465 ± 20 AU [p = 0.679] for 6.0 mg/mL capsaicin). DBF responses to ES were not different between either patients with MRM or controls, at either occasion. Estradiol levels on days 19-21 of the menstrual cycle were higher in healthy controls (mean ± SEM: 75 ± 8 pg/mL) than in patients with MRM (52 ± 4 pg/mL, p = 0.014). In postmenopausal women, DBF responses to capsaicin and ES, as well as estradiol levels at both visits, were all significantly reduced compared to patients with MRM and controls (in all cases, p , 0.05). Conclusions: Our study provides evidence for a reduced menstrual cyclicity of both estradiol levels and the trigeminovascular vasodilator system in patients with MRM.

hdl.handle.net/1765/85343
Neurology
Erasmus MC: University Medical Center Rotterdam

Ibrahimi, K., van Oosterhout, W., van Dorp, W., Danser, J., Garrelds, I., Kushner, S., … Maassen van den Brink, A. (2014). Reduced trigeminovascular cyclicity in patients with menstrually related migraine. Neurology, 84(2), 125–131. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1765/85343