Health

A new study and a new treatment for migraine

A new study and a new treatment for migraine

A new study and a new treatment for migraine

A new study sheds light on an important aspect of migraine by making use of the latest imaging technology to gain a new perspective on structures in the brain, which revealed enlarged areas around blood vessels in people with migraines.

According to New Atlas, citing EurekAlert, the new research focuses on what are known as perivascular spaces, which are gaps around blood vessels that help remove fluid from the brain. Larger spaces of the vacuoles have been linked to microvascular disease, which can lead to other consequences such as inflammation and abnormalities in the shape and size of the blood-brain barrier.

Advanced technology

The researchers used an advanced magnetic resonance imaging technique, called 7T MRI, to explore the relationship between enlarged spaces around blood vessels and migraines by comparing small differences in the brains of study participants.

“Because [the] 7T MRI technology is able to create images of the brain with much higher resolution and better quality than other types of MRI, it can be used to show small changes that occur in brain tissue,” said researcher Wilson Zhou, of the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. After a migraine.”

Micro cerebral hemorrhage

Zhou added that among the changes that occur after a migraine is the occurrence of micro-cerebral hemorrhage, in addition to the enlargement of the spaces surrounding blood vessels in the semi-acute midsection of the brain, noting that it had not previously been observed that “there are significant changes in the spaces around the vessels.” in a brain region called the centrum semovale.

Professor Zhou added that there are still many questions for scientists to answer regarding the new discovery, and whether these changes occur as a result of migraine, or if the condition itself presents itself as a migraine.

new treatment

The team of researchers in the study, the results of which will be presented at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America next week, hypothesize that the differences in the perivascular spaces may be indicative of a disorder in the glymphatic system, which works with the perivascular spaces to remove waste from the brain.

The researchers hope to solve these mysteries through larger studies in more diverse groups, over longer time frames, which could "eventually aid in the development of new, personalized ways to diagnose and treat migraine."

Ryan Sheikh Mohammed

Deputy Editor-in-Chief and Head of Relations Department, Bachelor of Civil Engineering - Topography Department - Tishreen University Trained in self-development

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