The impact of a migraine attack and its after-effects on perceptual organization, attention, and working memory

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Abstract

Introduction: Many migraine patients report cognitive complaints during the first hours or days following a migraine attack. The aim of this study was to assess whether and which cognitive (perceptual, attentional, or memory) processes are impaired during the first 48 hours after a migraine attack.Methods: Three different cognitive tasks (global-local task, the attentional network task, and N-back task) were administered to 16 migraine patients (13 migraine without aura; mean age 58 years, 15 female) and 18 controls (59 years, 15 female), matched on age, gender, and educational level. Tasks were administered at three time points; during the first headache free day following a migraine attack (first session), 24 hours later (second session), and 12 days after the attack (third session).Results: The attentional network and N-back tasks showed no significant differences between migraineurs and controls. In the global-local task, controls showed faster reaction times to global than to local stimuli, which is the standard global-precedence effect. This effect was absent in the migraineurs in all three sessions, especially if they used prophylaxis.Conclusion: Migraineurs had no impaired attentional or working-memory functioning in the 2 days after an attack. They did show impairments in the processing of global visual features compared with controls, both between and immediately after an attack. © International Headache Society 2011.

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Koppen, H., Palm-Meinders, I., Kruit, M., Lim, V., Nugroho, A., Westhof, I., … Hommel, B. (2011). The impact of a migraine attack and its after-effects on perceptual organization, attention, and working memory. Cephalalgia, 31(14), 1419–1427. https://doi.org/10.1177/0333102411417900

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