4.5 Article

Tracking tDCS induced grey matter changes in episodic migraine: a randomized controlled trial

Journal

JOURNAL OF HEADACHE AND PAIN
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s10194-021-01347-y

Keywords

Transcranial direct current stimulation; Migraine; Structural alterations; Voxel-based morphometry; Brain plasticity; Structural MRI

Funding

  1. Werner Dessauer Foundation
  2. SNF Eccellenza Professorial Fellowship [PCEFP3_181362/1]

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Occipital tDCS is an effective treatment for preventing migraine attacks. This study tracked grey matter volume changes in occipital areas of episodic migraineurs during and after tDCS treatment, showing that tDCS can modify grey matter volume in the lingual gyrus, providing a potential neuroimaging biomarker for treatment monitoring.
Background: Occipital transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) is an effective and safe treatment for migraine attack prevention. Structural brain alterations have been found in migraineurs in regions related to pain modulation and perception, including occipital areas. However, whether these structural alterations can be dynamically modulated through tDCS treatment is understudied. Objective: To track longitudinally grey matter volume changes in occipital areas in episodic migraineurs during and up to five months after occipital tDCS treatment in a single-blind, and sham-controlled study. Methods: 24 episodic migraineurs were randomized to either receive verum or sham occipital tDCS treatment for 28 days. To investigate dynamic grey matter volume changes patients underwent structural MRI at baseline (prior to treatment), 1.5 months and 5.5 months (after completion of treatment). 31 healthy controls were scanned with the same MRI protocol. Morphometry measures assessed rate of changes over time and between groups by means of tensor-based morphometry. Results: Before treatment, migraineurs reported 5.6 monthly migraine days on average. A cross-sectional analysis revealed grey matter volume increases in the left lingual gyrus in migraineurs compared to controls. Four weeks of tDCS application led to a reduction of 1.9 migraine days/month and was paralleled by grey matter volume decreases in the left lingual gyrus in the treatment group; its extent overlapping with that seen at baseline. Conclusion: This study shows that migraineurs have increased grey matter volume in the lingual gyrus, which can be modified by tDCS. Tracking structural plasticity in migraineurs provides a potential neuroimaging biomarker for treatment monitoring.

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