All Relations between aura and cerebral cortex

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
J E Hardeb. Migraine--why and how a cortical excitatory wave may initiate the aura and headache. Headache. vol 31. issue 4. 1991-07-25. PMID:2050515. a large number of clinical and neurophysiological observations are reviewed that clearly indicate that the symptoms of migraine aura result from a spread of an excitatory wave along the cortex from a primary focus. 1991-07-25 2023-08-11 Not clear
K H Reid, R Marrannes, A Wauquie. Spreading depression and central nervous system pharmacology. Journal of pharmacological methods. vol 19. issue 1. 1988-06-13. PMID:2896809. this suggests that a local (1-mm2) neurovascular injury is not likely to induce spreading depression--at least in normal cortex--and so is probably not the source of the spreading depression postulated to generate the aura of classic migraine. 1988-06-13 2023-08-11 rat
J L Skelton, A R Gardner-Medwin, S A Georg. The effects of carbon dioxide, oxygen and pH on spreading depression in the isolated chick retina. Brain research. vol 288. issue 1-2. 1984-03-14. PMID:6419984. the effect of raised pco2 is opposite to that observed previously in rat cortex in vivo, which afforded evidence for a similarity between sd and the disturbance in the aura phase of migraine attacks. 1984-03-14 2023-08-12 rat
J N Bla. Migraine: A vasomotor instability of the meningeal circulation. Lancet (London, England). vol 2. issue 8100. 1979-02-12. PMID:82693. it is proposed that the headache is due to stimulation of nociceptive nerve-endings in the walls of meningeal vessels (arterioles, venules, and particularly the dural venous sinuses); and that the aura arises from calibre changes in meningeal vessels that penetrate the outer cortex, resulting in localised inhibition or excitation. 1979-02-12 2023-08-11 Not clear