%0 Figure %A J. Hodkinson, Duncan %A Veggeberg, Rosanna %A L. Wilcox, Sophie %A Scrivani, Steven %A Burstein, Rami %A Becerra, Lino %A Borsook, David %D 2015 %T Primary Somatosensory Cortices Contain Altered Patterns of Regional Cerebral Blood Flow in the Interictal Phase of Migraine - Fig 3 %U https://plos.figshare.com/articles/figure/_Primary_Somatosensory_Cortices_Contain_Altered_Patterns_of_Regional_Cerebral_Blood_Flow_in_the_Interictal_Phase_of_Migraine_Fig_3_/1545164 %R 10.1371/journal.pone.0137971.g003 %2 https://plos.figshare.com/ndownloader/files/2266345 %K CBF values %K blood flow %K brain function %K migraine patients %K migraine attacks %K mri %K somatosensory cortex %K headache attack frequency %K somatosensory stimuli %K Regional Cerebral Blood Flow %K Primary Somatosensory Cortices Contain Altered Patterns %K asl %K CBF data %K interictal migraine %K cutaneous allodynia %K CBF differences %K S 1 %K skin hypersensitivity %K resonance imaging %K Interictal Phase %X

(A) Migraine-related increase of rCBF in the primary somatosensory cortices. Dotted black lines correspond to the boundary of central sulcus (CS) and post-central sulcus (PoCS). Statistical images are displayed with a cluster probability threshold of P<0.05, corrected for multiple comparisons (FWE). Data are shown in Caret PALS space, with left/right orientations marked. (B) Magnitude of the CBF changes within S1. Plots represent the mean (red line), 95% confidence interval (light-grey region), and 1 standard deviation (dark-grey region). Individual subjects data are shown in blue. Both groups are normally distributed, and significant after independent two-sample T-test (p = 0.0021).

%I PLOS ONE