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Dive into the research topics where Martin Uglem is active.

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Featured researches published by Martin Uglem.


Headache | 2013

Visual Evoked Potentials in Interictal Migraine: No Confirmation of Abnormal Habituation

Petter Moe Omland; Kristian Bernhard Nilsen; Martin Uglem; Gøril Bruvik Gravdahl; Mattias Linde; Knut Hagen; Trond Sand

We intended to study the effect of check size on visual evoked potential habituation in interictal migraine, using the faster 3 per second reversal rate and an improved analytic procedure with block‐number blinding.


Cephalalgia | 2017

Does pain sensitivity change by migraine phase? A blinded longitudinal study:

Martin Uglem; Petter Moe Omland; Kristian Bernhard Nilsen; Erling Tronvik; Lars Jacob Stovner; Knut Hagen; Mattias Linde; Trond Sand

Objective Studies suggest that pain thresholds may be altered before and during migraine headaches, but it is still debated if a central or peripheral dysfunction is responsible for the onset of pain in migraine. The present blinded longitudinal study explores alterations in thermal pain thresholds and suprathreshold heat pain scores before, during, and after headache. Methods We measured pain thresholds to cold and heat, and pain scores to 30 seconds of suprathreshold heat four times in 49 migraineurs and once in 31 controls. Sessions in migraineurs were categorized by migraine diaries as interictal, preictal (≤one day before attack), ictal or postictal (≤one day after attack). Results Trigeminal cold pain thresholds were decreased (p = 0.014) and pain scores increased (p = 0.031) in the ictal compared to the interictal phase. Initial pain scores were decreased (p < 0.029), and the temporal profile showed less adaptation (p < 0.020) in the preictal compared to the interictal phase. Hand cold pain thresholds were decreased in interictal migraineurs compared to controls (p < 0.019). Conclusion Preictal heat hypoalgesia and reduced adaptation was followed by ictal trigeminal cold suballodynia and heat hyperalgesia. Our results support that cyclic alterations of pain perception occur late in the prodromal phase before headache. Further longitudinal investigation of how pain physiology changes within the migraine cycle is important to gain a more complete understanding of the pathogenic mechanisms behind the migraine attack.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2016

Non-invasive cortical modulation of experimental pain in migraine.

Martin Uglem; Petter Moe Omland; Morten Engstrøm; Gøril Bruvik Gravdahl; Mattias Linde; Knut Hagen; Trond Sand

OBJECTIVE To test the hypothesis that secondary somatosensory cortex (S2) is involved in the migraine pathogenesis, by exploring the effect of navigated repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) to S2 on thermal perception and pain. METHODS In this blinded sham-controlled case-control study of 26 interictal migraineurs and 31 controls, we measured thermal detection and pain thresholds on the hand and forehead, and pain ratings to heat stimulation on the forearm and temple, after real and sham 10Hz rTMS. RESULTS rTMS increased cold and heat pain thresholds in controls as compared to interictal migraineurs (p<0.026). rTMS decreased forehead and arm pain ratings (p<0.005) and increased hand cool detection thresholds (p<0.005) in both interictal migraineurs and controls. CONCLUSIONS The effects of rTMS to S2 on thermal pain measures differed significantly between migraine and control subjects, although the effects were generally low in magnitude and not present in pain ratings. However, the lack of cold and heat pain threshold increase in migraineurs may reflect a hypofunction of inhibitory pain modulation mechanisms. SIGNIFICANCE The expected rTMS-induced cold and heat hypoalgesia was not found among migraineurs, possibly a reflection of reduced intracortical inhibition.


Journal of Headache and Pain | 2017

Habituation of laser-evoked potentials by migraine phase: a blinded longitudinal study

Martin Uglem; Petter Moe Omland; Marit Stjern; Gøril Bruvik Gravdahl; Trond Sand

BackgroundMigraineurs seem to have cyclic variations in cortical excitability in several neurophysiological modalities. Laser-evoked potentials (LEP) are of particular interest in migraine because LEP specifically targets pain pathways, and studies have reported different LEP-changes both between and during headaches. Our primary aim was to explore potential cyclic variations in LEP amplitude and habituation in more detail with a blinded longitudinal study design.MethodsWe compared N1 and N2P2 amplitudes and habituation between two blocks of laser stimulations to the dorsal hand, obtained from 49 migraineurs with four sessions each. We used migraine diaries to categorize sessions as interictal (> one day from previous and to next attack), preictal (< one day before the attack), ictal or postictal (< one day after the attack). Also, we compared 29 interictal recordings from the first session to 30 controls.ResultsN1 and N2P2 amplitudes and habituation did not differ between preictal, interictal and postictal phase sessions, except for a post hoc contrast that showed deficient ictal habituation of N1. Habituation is present and similar in migraineurs in the interictal phase and controls.ConclusionsHand-evoked LEP amplitudes and habituation were mainly invariable between migraine phases, but this matter needs further study. Because hand-evoked LEP-habituation was similar in migraineurs and controls, the present findings contradict several previous LEP studies. Pain-evoked cerebral responses are normal and show normal habituation in migraine.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2017

Reduced motor cortical inhibition in migraine: A blinded transcranial magnetic stimulation study

J.P. Neverdahl; Petter Moe Omland; Martin Uglem; Morten Engstrøm; Trond Sand

OBJECTIVE To investigate motor cortical excitability, inhibition, and facilitation with navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in migraine in a blinded cross-sectional study. METHODS Resting motor threshold (RMT), cortical silent period (CSP), short-interval intracortical inhibition (SICI), and intracortical facilitation (ICF) were compared in 27 interictal migraineurs and 33 controls. 24 female interictal migraineurs and 27 female controls were compared in subgroup analyses. Seven preictal migraineurs were also compared to the interictal group in a hypothesis-generating analysis. Investigators were blinded for diagnosis during recording and analysis of data. RESULTS SICI was decreased in interictal migraineurs when compared to healthy controls (p=0.013), CSP was shortened in female interictal migraineurs (p=0.041). ICF was decreased in preictal compared to interictal migraineurs (p=0.023). RMT and ICF were not different between interictal migraineurs and controls. CONCLUSION Cortical inhibition was decreased in migraineurs between attacks, primarily in a female subgroup, indicating an importance of altered cortical inhibition in migraine. SIGNIFICANCE Previous studies on motor cortical excitability in migraineurs have yielded varying results. This relatively large and blinded study provides support for altered cortical inhibition in migraine. Measuring intracortical facilitation in the period preceding migraine attacks may be of interest for future studies.


Journal of Headache and Pain | 2014

EHMTI-0319. TMS-measured cortical excitability do not change by migraine phase: a blinded longitudinal study

Martin Uglem; Petter Moe Omland; Trond Sand

Many migraineurs have increased sensitivity to light, sounds, odours or sensory stimuli, particularly in the premonitory phase and during the headache attack. These symptoms may be caused by alterations in cortical excitability. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) measurements of cortical excitability in migraineurs have yielded conflicting results, possibly due to large interindividual differences, different procedures and lack of blinding.


The Journal of Pain | 2018

Pain Sensitivity and Thermal Detection Thresholds in Young Adults Born Preterm With Very Low Birth Weight or Small for Gestational Age at Term Compared With Controls

Johanne Marie M Iversen; Martin Uglem; Marit S. Indredavik; Pål Romundstad; Kristian Bernhard Nilsen; Trond Sand; Marite Rygg

The objective of this prospective long-term follow-up study was to investigate whether somatosensory function is altered among young adults born preterm with very low birth weight (VLBW; ≤1,500 g) or small for gestational age (SGA; <10th percentile) at term. In a blinded quantitative sensory testing protocol, we determined thermal detection, thermal pain, and pressure pain thresholds and the response to prolonged supra-threshold heat among 51 VLBW, 66 term SGA, and 86 term-born controls (birth weight ≥10th percentile) at 28 years. Self-reported chronic pain was also investigated. Except for increased sensitivity to cool in the term SGA group versus controls, we found no significant group differences regarding thermal or pain thresholds. Overall, male participants had higher pain thresholds, and no significant interactions of group and sex were observed (P > .14). Within the VLBW group, neonatal mechanical ventilation was associated with reduced sensitivity to cool, and length of mechanical ventilation correlated with lower pressure pain thresholds. The response to prolonged supra-threshold heat was similar between the groups, and the prevalence of self-reported chronic pain was not reliably different. In conclusion, low birth weight young adults were as sensitive to thermal and pain stimuli as term-born, normal birth weight controls, with the same sex differences. PERSPECTIVE To our knowledge, this is the first report on thermal and pain sensitivity among young adults born preterm with VLBW or SGA at term. The negative results from a comprehensive quantitative sensory testing protocol oppose previous findings of altered sensory perception among children and adolescents born preterm.


Cephalalgia | 2018

Visual and auditory cortical evoked potentials in interictal episodic migraine: The predictive value of a proposed diagnostic test should always be corrected for prevalence

Petter Moe Omland; Martin Uglem; Lars Jacob Stovner; Trond Sand

It is important to take disease prevalence within the target population (pre-test probability) correctly into account. Authors, referees and editors should be aware of this to prevent the publication of erroneous results. Ambrosini et al. (2) have replied to our letter (3) regarding their recent publication (4), and they still claim that the combination of visual evoked potentials (VEP) and intensity dependent auditory evoked potentials (IDAP) have a high diagnostic value in migraine. However, recalculation based on the sensitivity and specificity reported by Ambrosini et al. (3), and the expected population-prevalence equal to 15% for migraine, yields disappointingly low PPV for VEP, IDAP and the combinations of IDAP and VEP (Table 1). Indeed, the PPV of an abnormality of at least one of VEP and IDAP is only 30.7%, far below the 94.1% value given by Ambrosini et al. A PPV of 94.1 % would require considerably higher sensitivity and specificity than those reported by Ambrosini et al. Ambrosini et al. also suggest that regional differences in solar radiation could be of importance in migraine (2). This hypothesis should be investigated with rigorous methods. We contend that matched


Cephalalgia | 2017

Re: Visual and auditory cortical evoked potentials in interictal episodic migraine: An audit on 624 patients from three centres.

Petter Moe Omland; Martin Uglem; Lars Jacob Stovner; Trond Sand

To the Editor, In a recent publication, Ambrosini et al. (1) investigated the diagnostic value of visual and intensity dependent auditory evoked potentials (VEP and IDAP) in migraine. They concluded that these tests had insufficient diagnostic efficacy alone, but a good efficacy when combined. This conclusion is based on a positive predictive value (PPV) of 94.1% and diagnostic accuracy of 81.1%. However, these values are misleading, because the authors have not taken pretest probability into account. The pretest probability in the group tested with both VEP and IDAP was 86.5%, and a positive test increased the probability of disease by only 7.6 percentage points. A pretest probability (or migraine prevalence) of 15%, relevant for screening, reduces PPV and diagnostic accuracy to 30.7% and 69.2% respectively. The authors are in general too optimistic when interpreting their results. For instance, they describe a diagnostic accuracy of 54.3% for IDAP as ‘‘moderate to fair’’. This is only 4.3 percentage points better than the 50% that is expected from chance alone. Also, unpublished accuracy estimates from our own database of blinded VEP-studies show values close to 50%. Hence, we agree with Ambrosini et. al. (1) on this point; VEP habituation is not useful in differentiating migraineurs from headache-free controls. There are also other methodological limitations in the present multicentre study: (1) 87 % of the examinations were performed in one centre, the centres did not use the same VEP protocol, IDAP was only recorded in one centre, age and sex distributions were different in migraine and control groups, blinding during data recording was not applied and exclusions were not reported. These limitations may have an impact on results, as we have discussed previously (2). In addition, the study is retrospective, and the authors provide little information about how the subjects were recruited. The authors argue that VEP and IDAP could be useful in uncertain headache cases, based on the usual comparison of controls who obviously do not have the disease with migraineurs who obviously do. However, sensitivity and specificity will likely be even lower within a clinical context characterised by diagnostic uncertainty (3). Lijmer et al. (4) found that diagnostic performance of a test will be severely overestimated if a diseased population is compared to healthy controls, probably because cases that are difficult to diagnose are omitted from casecontrol studies. In contrast, we recommend performing blinded cohort studies, preferably a multicentre study, within a clinically-relevant study population, e.g. comparing migraine with tension-type headache. Although the concept of habituation is still of considerable scientific interest for several sensory and motor modalities in migraine, we have to conclude that the data presented by Ambrosini et. al. (1) suggests that the real diagnostic value of VEP and IDAP is very low. We therefore believe that uncertain headache cases should not be referred to VEP and IDAP. The proposed practice will waste time and resources, and it may also result in an incorrect diagnosis.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2014

P901: Visual evoked potential habituation in migraineurs: a longitudinal study with a blinded design

Petter Moe Omland; Martin Uglem; Trond Sand

Question: In spite of the bulk of studies showing reduced visual evoked potential (VEP) habituation in adult migraineurs, this abnormality has never demonstrated in children with migraine. VEP habituation can be assumed as a marker of the visual cortex excitability, whose abnormality in migraineurs is related to the genetic background of this disease. In pediatric age, it is debated whether the presence of migraine in the families of young migraineurs is due to a hypothesized genetic background or is a consequence of the “psychological environment”. The aim of our study was to investigate whether neurophysiologic or psychological elements are segregated in families of migraine children. Methods: We studied 11 children (2 siblings) with migraine without aura and their parents. VEPs were recorded in six successive blocks to test the change in amplitude of N75-P100 from the first to the sixth block (habituation). The psychological profile was made according to the CBCL/6-18 for children, YSR 11/18 for 11-18 years old patients and ASR for parents. Results: VEP habituation was significantly lower in both patients and migraineur parents than in non-migraineur parents (two-way ANOVA: F=14.7, p<0.001). As for the psychological tests, no significant “between groups” difference was found when we compared the Internalizing (p=0.5), externalizing (p=0.3) and Total scales scores (p=0.1). Conclusions: This is the first study showing a reduced VEP habituation in migraine children. Our results suggest that the familial distribution of the disease is due to a genetic background, while the “psychological environment” does not have a significant influence.

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Trond Sand

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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Petter Moe Omland

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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Mattias Linde

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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Knut Hagen

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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Gøril Bruvik Gravdahl

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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Lars Jacob Stovner

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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Morten Engstrøm

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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Erling Tronvik

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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Marit Stjern

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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