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      Identification of Everyday Sounds Perceived as Noise by Migraine Patients

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          Abstract

          Objective

          Sound hypersensitivity is highly comorbid with migraine headaches. To elucidate the pathogenic mechanism of migraine attacks, we must first identify the types of everyday environmental sounds they perceive as unpleasant and clarify the acoustic properties of such sounds. This study aimed to clarify the true nature of “noise,” i.e. everyday sounds perceived as unpleasant by migraineurs, by evaluating their subjective comfort/discomfort in response to several sounds commonly heard in everyday life.

          Methods

          Participants were presented with 20 environmental sounds they would likely hear daily. Subjects rated the pleasantness/unpleasantness of each stimulus using a nine-step scale.

          Patients

          We recruited 50 adults with migraine headaches (46 women, 4 men) and 50 healthy controls (35 women, 15 men).

          Results

          Migraineurs provided statistically significantly lower (more unpleasant) ratings to ambulance sirens, police car sirens, and railroad crossing bells than did controls. Our analysis also investigated the acoustic characteristics associated with higher rating gaps between the two groups. Greater divergence in ratings for the same stimulus was associated with less power (smaller amplitude envelope) and slower temporal variation in signals in the 400-Hz band.

          Conclusion

          We identified specific signal components associated with different subjective (un)pleasantness scores between migraineurs and healthy adults, which may lead to the elucidation of the pathogenic mechanism underlying migraine attacks triggered by sound.

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          Most cited references22

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          Speech recognition with primarily temporal cues.

          Nearly perfect speech recognition was observed under conditions of greatly reduced spectral information. Temporal envelopes of speech were extracted from broad frequency bands and were used to modulate noises of the same bandwidths. This manipulation preserved temporal envelope cues in each band but restricted the listener to severely degraded information on the distribution of spectral energy. The identification of consonants, vowels, and words in simple sentences improved markedly as the number of bands increased; high speech recognition performance was obtained with only three bands of modulated noise. Thus, the presentation of a dynamic temporal pattern in only a few broad spectral regions is sufficient for the recognition of speech.
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            A neural mechanism for exacerbation of headache by light

            The perception of migraine headache, which is mediated by nociceptive signals transmitted from the cranial dura mater to the brain, is uniquely exacerbated by exposure to light. Here we show that exacerbation of migraine headache by light is prevalent among blind persons who maintain non-image-forming photoregulation in the face of massive rod/cone degeneration. Using single-unit recording and neural tract-tracing in the rat, we identified dura-sensitive neurons in the posterior thalamus, whose activity was distinctly modulated by light, and whose axons projected extensively across layers I through V of somatosensory, visual and associative cortices. The cell bodies and dendrites of such dura/light-sensitive neurons were apposed by axons originating from retinal ganglion cells, predominantly from intrinsically-photosensitive retinal ganglion cells – the principle conduit of non-image-forming photoregulation. We propose that photoregulation of migraine headache is exerted by a non-image-forming retinal pathway that modulates the activity of dura-sensitive thalamocortical neurons.
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              Epidemiology of headache in a general population--a prevalence study.

              We present the first prevalence study of specific headache entities using the operational diagnostic criteria of the International Headache Society. One thousand 25-64 year old men and women, who lived in the western part of Copenhagen County were randomly drawn from the Danish National Central Person Registry. All subjects were invited to a general health examination focusing on headache and including: a self-administered questionnaire concerning sociodemographic variables, a structured headache interview and a general physical and neurological examination. The participation rate was 76%. Information about 79% of the non-participants showed a slightly differing headache prevalence which was not quantitatively important. The following results in participants are therefore representative of the total sample. The lifetime prevalences of headache (including anybody with any form of headache), migraine, and tension-type headache were 93, 8 and 69% in men; and 99, 25 and 88% in women. The point prevalence of headache was 11% in men and 22% in women. Prevalence of migraine in the previous year was 6% in men and 15% in women and the corresponding prevalences of tension-type headache were 63 and 86%. Differences according to sex were significant with a male: female ratio of 1:3 in migraine, and 4:5 in tension-type headache. The prevalence of tension-type headache decreased with increasing age, whereas migraine showed no correlation to age within the studied age interval. Headache disorders are extremely prevalent and represent a major health problem, which merits increased attention.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Intern Med
                Intern. Med
                Internal Medicine
                The Japanese Society of Internal Medicine
                0918-2918
                1349-7235
                1 February 2019
                1 June 2019
                : 58
                : 11
                : 1565-1572
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Graduate School of Engineering, Utsunomiya University, Japan
                [2 ]Department of Neurology, Dokkyo Medical University, Japan
                [3 ]Faculty of Human Informatics, Aichi Shukutoku University, Japan
                [4 ]Department of Manufacturing Technologists, Institute of Technologists, Japan
                Author notes

                Correspondence to Dr. Muneto Tatsumoto, tatsumu@ 123456dokkyomed.ac.jp

                Article
                10.2169/internalmedicine.2206-18
                6599942
                30713324
                3ba2b934-924b-4eeb-8363-9d82e6ac7bba
                Copyright © 2019 by The Japanese Society of Internal Medicine

                The Internal Medicine is an Open Access journal distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. To view the details of this license, please visit ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

                History
                : 30 September 2018
                : 25 November 2018
                Categories
                Original Article

                migraine,noise,frequency components,sound hypersensitivity

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