Autor: |
Beckmann Y; 1 Department of Neurology, 226844 Katip Çelebi Universitesi , Atatürk Training and Research Hospital, Turkey., Gökçe S; 1 Department of Neurology, 226844 Katip Çelebi Universitesi , Atatürk Training and Research Hospital, Turkey., Zorlu N; 2 Department of Psychiatry, 226844 Katip Çelebi Universitesi , Atatürk Training and Research Hospital, Turkey., Türe HS; 1 Department of Neurology, 226844 Katip Çelebi Universitesi , Atatürk Training and Research Hospital, Turkey., Gelal F; 3 Department of Radiology, 226844 Katip Çelebi Universitesi , Atatürk Training and Research Hospital, Turkey. |
Abstrakt: |
Background Medication-overuse headache is a common clinical entity, but neuroimaging studies investigating volumetric and microstructural alterations of the brain in medication-overuse headache are rare. Therefore, in the current longitidunal study we evaluated gray matter volume and white matter integrity in patients with medication-overuse headache before and after drug withdrawal. Methods A prospective study evaluated 27 patients with medication-overuse headache and 27 age-, sex-, and education-matched healthy adults. High-resolution T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging and diffusion tensor imaging were obtained from the control group and medication-overuse headache patients before and six months after drug withdrawal. Tract-based spatial statistics of multiple diffusivity indices and voxel-based morphometry were employed to investigate white and gray matter abnormalities. Results No correlation was found between age, gender, education and smoking status in both groups. The most commonly overused medications were simple analgesics (96.3%) and combined analgesics (3.7%). The mean duration of the history of medication overuse and headaches was 56.7 ± 63.5 months. White matter diffusional and gray matter morphological alterations including volume, fractional anisotropy, radial diffusivity, and axial diffusivity analyses showed no significant relationship in the patients before and six months after withdrawal of analgesics. Also no difference was observed between the patients versus controls. Conclusion Our data demonstrated no structural alterations within the brain in medication-overuse headache. |