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Migraine
Migraine
by Oliver Sacks
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The Migraine Brain: Your Breakthrough Guide to Fewer Headaches, Better Health
The Migraine Brain: Your Breakthrough Guide to Fewer Headaches, Better Health
by Carolyn Bernstein Elaine McArdle
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Living Well with Migraine Disease and Headaches: What Your Doctor Doesn't Tell You...That You Need to Know (Living Well (Collins))
Living Well with Migraine Disease and Headaches: What Your Doctor Doesn't Tell You...That You Need to Know (Living Well (Collins))
by Teri Robert
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Migraine Brains and Bodies: A Comprehensive Guide to Solving the Mystery of Your Migraines
Migraine Brains and Bodies: A Comprehensive Guide to Solving the Mystery of Your Migraines
by C. M. Shifflett
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Migraines Be Gone: 7 Simple Steps to Eliminating Your Migraines Forever
Migraines Be Gone: 7 Simple Steps to Eliminating Your Migraines Forever
by Kelsie Kenefick
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Rebound Headaches Rebound headaches are headaches that may be caused by overusing pain medicines. Typically rebound headaches begin early in the morning, however the location and severity of the headache can change on a daily basis. Indeed, rebound headaches typically are daily occurrences and can lead to problems involving anxiety, irritability, sleeplessness and depression. Migraine medications work to raise serotonin levels to ease pain, but when too much medication is ingested something happens to the serotonin levels which causes the chemical to lose its effectiveness.
 
Research shows that serotonin levels are lower when you take too much pain medication and then rise slightly after the headaches get better and you stop taking the medication. Either over-the-counter medication or prescription drugs can lead to rebound headaches if taken too often or in greater amounts than recommended. In addition to sedatives and tranquilizers, other rebound-causing medications include: Caffeine-containing analgesics (Excedrin, Anacin, etc.) Caffeine is a primary ingredient in many headache medicines. Although caffeine-based medication can relieve migraine pain when temporarily, taking medicine containing caffeine every day—as well as drinking caffeine-loaded beverages such as coffee or soft drinks—can lead to more frequent and severe headaches. If the headache worsens whenever you stop having caffeine, the caffeine may be causing some of your headaches. Butalbital compounds (Fiorinal, Fioricet, Phrenilin, etc.)• Isometheptene compounds (Midrin, Duradrin, etc.)• Decongestants (Sudafed, Tylenol Sinus, Dristan, Afrin, etc.) • Ergotamines (Ergomar, Wigraine, Migranal and D.H.E. 45)• Triptans (Imitrex, Amerge, Zomig, Maxalt and Axert)• Opioids and related drugs (Tylenol with codeine, Percocet, Darvocet, OxyContin, etc.) Medications that include any form of codeine, such as Tylenol 3, Vicodin and Percocet, must be used with care because they can cause dependency quickly. If you experience any of the following symptoms, you may be suffering from rebound headaches: Your headache occurs daily or almost daily (three or four times a week). You are considered a sufferer of a primary headache disorder and you use instant prevention medication frequently and in large quantities. Your headache deviates in strength, form, severity, and location on the head. Even the slightest physical movement or bare minimum of intellectual expenditure cause the onset of the headache. You have a lower than normal threshold for pain. Your headache is accompanied by any of the these symptoms: nausea, restlessness, anxiety, irritability, memory problems, difficulty in intellectual concentration, depression. You begin to notice evidence of an increasing tolerance to the effectiveness of analgesics over a period of time. You suffer withdrawal symptoms when you abruptly are taken off the medication. You notice a spontaneous improvement of headache pain when you discontinue the medications. Should rebound migraines develop due to the overuse of medication, recovery cannot be accomplished unless the sufferer ceases taking the drugs. On the other hand, should it turn out that caffeine is causing the rebound, you may be able to get away with merely reducing your intake instead of eliminating it altogether. Before deciding on whether you want to stop gradually or abruptly, consider the following: Most headache drugs can be stopped suddenly, but make sure you consult with a physician before withdrawal. Certain non-headache medications, such as anti-anxiety drugs or beta-blockers, require gradual withdrawal. If you decide to go the route of gradually laying off standard headache medications, withdrawal should be completed within three days or shorter. Any longer and discouragement and impatience sets in. Alternative medications may be administered during the first days. Examples of drugs that may be used include dihydroergotamine (with or without metoclopramide), NSAIDs (in mild cases), corticosteroids, or valproate. Whichever method you decide to take when stopping your medication, expect a period of worsening headache afterward. Most people feel better within two weeks, although headache symptoms can persist for as long as four months and in some rare cases even longer. If the symptoms do not respond to treatment, or if they cause severe nausea and vomiting, the patient may need to be hospitalized. The good news is that many patients experience long-term relief from all headaches afterward, and one study even concluded with over 80% of patients significantly improved four months after withdrawal.


 

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Migraines Menopause News

Women and aging: getting older, feeling better, untangling some answers

Should you just settle for feeling tired and gaining weight as you get older? Some doctors say no, and recommend you find out exactly what's happening in your body.

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Fabulous at 50! You have fewer colds, less sensitive teeth and are better at sex - Daily Mail


Daily Mail

Fabulous at 50! You have fewer colds, less sensitive teeth and are better at sex
Daily Mail
Some studies show as many as 40 per cent of women who suffer migraines no longer have attacks by the age of 65. With many, it's the menopause that makes the difference, according to Migraine Action: 67 per cent of women find their migraines stop or ...

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Menopause: How 'the change' has changed - The Boston Globe


Menopause: How 'the change' has changed
The Boston Globe
For Shelley, menopause was, as she put it, “horrific.'' In the months before and after her last menstrual period, Shelley had every known physical and psychological symptom of menopause except migraine headaches: hot flashes, drenching sweats, ...

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In Rating Pain, Women Are the More Sensitive Sex - New York Times (blog)


New York Times (blog)

In Rating Pain, Women Are the More Sensitive Sex
New York Times (blog)
By TARA PARKER-POPE It has long been known that certain pain-related conditions, like fibromyalgia, migraine and irritable bowel syndrome, are more common in women than in men. And chronic pain after childbirth is surprisingly common; the Institute of ...

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Headaches… When to take them seriously - The Island.lk (subscription)


Headaches… When to take them seriously
The Island.lk (subscription)
Tension headaches and migraine account 90% of all headaches. One approach in categorsing headaches is to distinguish 'urgent headaches' (those that may be life threatening) from others that may be 'less urgent.' 'Urgent' headaches may be life ...

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Ehrenreich's Prescience - New Republic (blog)


New Republic (blog)

Ehrenreich's Prescience
New Republic (blog)
Nietzche himself, Hitchens observed, seems to have caught an early dose of syphilis, very probably during his first-ever sexual encounter, which gave him crushing migraine headaches and attacks of blindness and metastasized into dementia and paralysis.

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