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Headache, Migraine

Migraines are pounding or throbbing headaches that start suddenly, last for hours and usually occur with other symptoms such as nausea. The headaches usually occur between ages 10 and 30, often vanishing after age 50 or, in women, after menopause. More women than men have migraines.

Signs and Symptoms

 

bulletThrobbing or pounding pain on one side of your head (or both)
bulletNausea and vomiting
bulletDisturbances in your hearing or vision (such as flashes of light) that often start 10 to 30 minutes before the headache
bulletParts of your body may feel numb, weak, or tingly
bulletLight, noise, and movement—especially bending over—make your head hurt worse; you want to lie down in a dark, quiet room
bulletYour feet and hands feel cold and may look bluish

 

What Causes It?

No one knows for certain what causes migraine. They can run in families. Researchers do know that something triggers blood vessels in the head to tighten and then expand, a process that irritates the nerves surrounding those blood vessels. Things that can trigger migraine include the following.

 

bulletAbnormal blood levels of the neurotransmitter serotonin
bulletMedicines for high blood pressure, angina, and arthritis
bulletCertain foods and alcohol; missing meals; too much sun; sleeping too little or too much
bulletHormones and menstruation
bulletCertain odors, such as perfume or cigarette smoke
bulletStress

 

What to Expect at Your Provider's Office

Your health care provider will ask questions to help identify the cause of your headaches. He or she will teach you how to use painkillers so the medicine doesn't cause a "rebound headache."

Treatment Options

Treatment Plan

Avoid all known migraine triggers if possible. Put an ice pack on your forehead at the onset of a headache. Regular aerobic exercise can reduce the frequency and intensity of migraine episodes. Various drugs are available both to prevent migraines and to relieve their symptoms.

Drug Therapies

Prescription

 

bulletErgotamines—relieves moderate migraines; taken orally or by suppository
bulletDihydroergotamine (DHE)—for severe migraines; taken orally, by injection, or intravenously
bulletBeta-blockers or calcium-channel blockers—are blood pressure medications that work by controlling expansion and contraction of blood vessels and can also prevent migraines in some people; various side effects
bulletLidocaine nasal spray—may give quick relief

 

Over the Counter

 

bulletAspirin or ibuprofen—may be effective for mild migraines, especially if taken early in the attack

 

Complementary and Alternative Therapies

A combination of drugs for pain relief and complementary therapies to reduce recurrence can offer effective management of migraines. Biofeedback to control vascular contraction and improve stress management may influence the frequency and intensity of attacks.

Nutrition

 

bulletAvoid food allergens. Some common allergens are alcohol (especially red wine), cheese, chocolate, citrus, cow's milk, wheat, eggs, coffee, tea, beef, pork, corn, tomato, rye, yeast, shellfish, food additives (preservatives and coloring), and nitrates.
bulletAvoid caffeine because it is a vasodilator.
bulletEssential fatty acids (1,500 to 3,000 mg per day) may be helpful. Supplementing with fish oil or flax seed oil (1 to 3 mg twice a day) may also be helpful.
bulletMagnesium (500 mg per day) increases muscle relaxation.
bulletInjection of one gram of magnesium by a physician can terminate an acute migraine headache within minutes.
bulletInjection of folic acid (15 mg) in one study achieved total relief of acute headache within one hour in 60 percent of patients.
bulletOmega-3 oils (EPA and DHA, average dose 14 grams daily) greatly reduce intensity and frequency of migraines.
bulletVitamin B2 (riboflavin) (400 mg/day for three months) has been shown to reduce migraine frequency by two-thirds.
bulletVitamin C (2,000 mg per day), vitamin E (400 to 600 IU per day), vitamin B6 (100 mg per day), choline (100 to 300 mg per day) and mixed bioflavonoids (1,000 mg per day).
bullet5-hydroxytryptophan (300 mg twice a day) for migraine prevention, enhanced by taking with 25 mg of vitamin B6.

 

Herbs

Herbs may be used as dried extracts (capsules, powders, teas), glycerites (glycerine extracts), or tinctures (alcohol extracts). Feverfew (Tanacetum) can help with both frequency and intensity of migraines. Take two fresh leaves daily, 250 to 300 mg dried herb (capsules) twice a day, or 30 drops of tincture three times per day. Use feverfew by itself.

Use the following herbs in combination. Put 1 tsp. of each herb in one cup of water; steep for 10 minutes, and take two to four times a day. For tinctures, use 60 drops of each herb, two to four times a day. Jamaican dogwood (Piscidia piscipula); skullcap (Scutellaria lateriflora); gingko (Gingko biloba); ginger (Zingiber officinalis); meadowsweet (Filipendula ulmaria).

Homeopathy

Some of the most common remedies used for migraines are listed below. Usually, the dose is 12X to 30C every one to four hours until your symptoms get better.

 

bulletIris versicolor: for periodic migraines that begin with blurred vision
bulletLac defloratum: for a migraine in the front of your head that starts with an aura of dim vision, nausea, vomiting, and chills
bulletNatrum muriaticum: for migraines that feel like "hammers beating the head," that are better when you lie down alone in the dark
bulletSanguinaria: for right-sided migraines that begin in your neck and move up, and migraines that make you vomit

 

Physical Medicine

Chiropractic adjustments or craniosacral therapy may be helpful.

Acupuncture

May be helpful, especially if migraines are hormonally influenced.

Massage

Massage may help release chronic neck and shoulder tension and maintain an even blood flow to the head.

Special Considerations

Call your provider if you suddenly develop new symptoms.

Supporting Research

Berkow R. The Merck Manual. 15th ed. Rahway, NJ: Merck Sharp & Dohme Research Laboratories; 1987.

De Weerdt CJ, Bootsma HPR, Hendricks H. Herbal medicines in migraine prevention. Randomized double-blind placebo controlled crossover trial of a feverfew preparation. Phytomedicine. 1996;3:225–230.

Gruenwald J, Brendler T, Jaenicke C et al, eds. PDR for Herbal Medicines. Montvale, NJ: Medical Economics Company; 1998.

Minirth F. The Headache Book: Prevention and Treatment for All Types of Headaches. Nashville, Tenn: Thomas Nelson; 1994.

Morrison R. Desktop Guide to Keynotes and Confirmatory Symptoms. Albany, Calif: Hahnemann Clinic Publishing; 1993.

Murphy JJ, Heptinsall S, Mitchell JRA. Randomised double-blind placebo-controlled trial of feverfew in migraine prevention. Lancet. 1988;2:189–192.

Murray MT. Encyclopedia of Nutritional Supplements. Rocklin, Calif: Prima Publishing; 1996.

Palevitch D, Earon G, Carasso R. Feverfew (Tanacetum parthenium) as a prophylactic treatment for migraine: a double-blind controlled study. Phytotherapy Res. 1997;11:508–511.

Pryse-Phillips W. Guideline for the diagnosis and management of migraine in clinical practice. Can Med Assoc J. 1997;156:1273–1287.

Walker L, Brown E. The Alternative Pharmacy: Break The Drug Cycle With Safe Natural Treatment For 200 Everyday Ailments. Paramus, NJ: Prentice Hall; 1998.

Copyright © 2000 Integrative Medicine Communications

The publisher does not accept any responsibility for the accuracy of the information or the consequences arising from the application, use, or misuse of any of the information contained herein, including any injury and/or damage to any person or property as a matter of product liability, negligence, or otherwise. No warranty, expressed or implied, is made in regard to the contents of this material. No claims or endorsements are made for any drugs or compounds currently marketed or in investigative use. This material is not intended as a guide to self-medication. The reader is advised to discuss the information provided here with a doctor, pharmacist, nurse, or other authorized healthcare practitioner and to check product information (including package inserts) regarding dosage, precautions, warnings, interactions, and contraindications before administering any drug, herb, or supplement discussed herein.