Why Migraines Are Worse Without Enough Sleep

For the first time, researchers have studied what happens in the brains of people who have migraines when they haven’t slept enough.

Migraine is characterized by pulsating headaches, photophobia, vomiting, nausea, and increased sensitivity to sound.

The disease affects about 15% of the Norwegian population, which similar to the incidence globally.

Migraine is the leading cause of disability in people between the ages of 16 and 50.

“These are important years in one’s life when it comes to school, higher education, and career. Migraines are a great burden for both the individual and society. Many people who struggle with migraine are away from work a lot. This is a very common disorder that we need to understand better so that better treatment can be provided,” says Petter Moe Omland, a medical doctor and postdoctoral fellow at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology.

Now he and a research team have discovered a new piece of the puzzle about the migraine brain.

“It is well known that sleep can relieve migraine headaches, migraine attacks can start during or after sleep, and many people with migraine say that disturbed sleep triggers attacks,” says Omland.

Migraine patients also have reduced sleep quality, more daytime fatigue, and more sleep disturbances compared to people without headaches. In addition, insomnia is associated with an increased risk of developing migraines.

Many people who have migraines feel that touch as painful during attacks and have heightened sensitivity to light, smell and touch between attacks.

“Now we know more about the link between pain and sleep,” Omland says.

The test subjects have sacrificed a lot to help the researchers find new answers. During the course of two studies, 140 people sacrificed sleep and had their brain’s nervous system studied and measured.

The examinations are quick and safe measurements of what is happening in the brain. In the latest publication from these studies, the subjects were subjected to pain in order for the researchers to find out more about the connection between sleep and migraine.

The participants in the study were divided into two groups, one group who had migraine, and a second group of healthy control subjects. The study was blinded, which means that the researchers did not know who belonged to which groups.

Participants were examined twice on different days. All were examined after two nights of normal sleep, and after two nights of reduced sleep. All participants also had to keep a sleep diary, as well as use an electronic meter that logged sleep.

During the actual examination, the participants wore a cap with EEG electrodes. The EEG electrodes were used to measure activity in the brain during two types of pain stimulation, one with a laser and one with electrical stimulation.

In this way, the researchers were able to measure activity in the brain and investigate how the brain handled pain signals after little sleep.

“None of this was dangerous, but it was clearly uncomfortable. People with migraine are incredibly good at volunteering for trials because they want there to be more knowledge about the disease,” says Omland.

The study shows that the cerebral cortex in people with migraine responds differently to pain than in others when the migraine sufferers haven’t had enough sleep. In another recent study, the researchers showed that lack of sleep affects systems in the brain that slow down the activation of nerve cells in those who have migraines.

It may be these systems that cause the brain to process pain and other sensory impressions differently in those with migraine than those who don’t get these headaches.

“The mechanisms that are supposed to reduce pain do not work quite as in people who do not have migraines. The pain is not dampened as much as in healthy people,” says Omland.

Omland himself did not have migraines when he started studying them, but developed them for a period.

“I had small children, worked as a doctor and was a researcher as well. After a long period when I slept very little, I started waking up with severe migraine attacks in the middle of the night. It was very troublesome. My brain obviously couldn’t stand sleeping so little for a long time. The fact that I got these headaches myself became an extra motivation to understand more,” Omland says.

The research appears in the journal Cephalalgia.

Source: Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Original Study DOI: 10.1177/03331024251329400

Important Notice: This article was also published at www.futurity.org by Norwegian University of Science and Technology where all credits are due.

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