The Concept of Basilar Artery Migraine
It was 1961 when Bickerstaff first wrote about and
drew attention to Basilar Artery Migraine. He was
the first to ever introduce the concept, and he described
symptoms that included bilateral disturbance of vision,
ataxia, dysarthria, vertigo, tinnitus, and face and/or
limb paresthesias. These symptoms, as Bickerstaff
described, were followed by severe throbbing headache,
usually in the occipital region (near the base of
the skull, in the back of the head).
The visual symptoms that Bickerstaff described sudden,
bilateral visual loss that occurred over a period
of seconds and persisted for up to 15 minutes, and
vivid flashes of light that occurred throughout the
patients' visual field.
Bickerstaff described Basilar Artery Migraine as
having symptoms that lasted between 2 and 45 minutes.
He went on to say that the symptoms rapidly disappeared
after this time, but that if the patient had suffered
complete loss of vision, that particular symptom tended
to disappear less quickly. The patients' vision normally
progressed through a phase of "graying vision"
before full vision returned.
None of the patients described in this study had
the characteristic "fortification spectra"
of classic migraine in addition to their symptoms
of brainstem ischemia.
Majority of Bickerstaff's Study Patients Adolescent
Girls
Twenty-six of the 34 patients that Bickerstaff studied
and described in his 1961 article were adolescent
girls. Most of the attacks suffered by these patients
were infrequent. In the adolescent girls, attacks
appeared to be associated with the menstrual cycle.
Bickerstaff also wrote that episodes of Basilar Artery
Migraine normally subsided over a period of years,
and that they are often replaced by other types of
migraine--more common varieties such as classical
or common migraine.
Impossible to Prove a Definite Diagnosis
It was impossible, according to Bickerstaff, to prove
a definite diagnosis. However, he stated that considerations
such as (1) occurrence of other, more "typical"
migrainous attacks in the studied patients, (2) absence
of all neurologic abnormality in patients between
attacks, (3) the particular mode of onset, (4) the
headache normally associated with Basilar Artery Migraine,
and (4) the incidence of family history of some form
of migraine made the diagnosis of Basilar Artery Migraine
most likely.
Impaired Consciousness and Brainstem Ischemia
In a later study, Bickerstaff described another group
of patients with Basilar Artery Migraine. This group
suffered symptoms of impaired consciousness during
their BAM attacks. Bickerstaff proposed that this
was caused by "transient ischemia of the reticular
activating system of the brainstem secondary to vasomotor
disturbance in the distribution of the basilar artery."
Bickerstaff also later suggested the two causes that
could lead to loss of consciousness in patients with
migraine: brainstem ischemia of the reticular activating
system and ischemia producing seizure in a potentially
epileptic brain. The second of these is much less
common. The first, the brainstem ischemia, is what
we see in an attack of Basilar Artery Migraine.