So. Beta Blockers. Do they work? I've been given a prescription for them but I'm nervous to start any long-term medication again. It's called PropranoLOL which makes me LOL.
I like the sound of something that stops anxiety as a side effect, but don't like the sound of something that makes you tired all the time and gives you crazy nightmares.
Anyone?
― ALTERN K8 (Masonic Boom), Monday, 16 August 2010 11:49 (fourteen years ago) link
i've had like three migraines in the past two weeks (and one more migraine that i was able to get rid of in the aura stage). but reflexology does help, kinda...
http://www.livestrong.com/article/12881-use-reflexology-migraines/
― 808s and Hatebeak (get bent), Tuesday, 28 September 2010 08:06 (fourteen years ago) link
i was able to get rid of in the aura stage
I always get the headache first for 15-20 minutes, then the aura starts up. Maybe that's because my main trigger is a blocked sinus.
― Les centimètres énigmatiques (snoball), Tuesday, 28 September 2010 09:06 (fourteen years ago) link
i have bad sinuses too but my sinus headaches are distinctly different from my migraines. it's another set of pressure points, and my sinus headaches have no aura.
― 808s and Hatebeak (get bent), Tuesday, 28 September 2010 09:37 (fourteen years ago) link
Kate, I have heard great things about betablockers but I am weary of'em. I mean, shit, those are some strong meds. My neighbour once fell asleep at the table with his bookkeeper. lolol
Now I don't know what'what: sinus or migraine. I thought I had a sinus problem but no gunk came out. :-( I do have to say that now that I am antidepressants, I feel a LOT better. Less migraine attacks due to less stress. YAY. I think they put some speed in my meds cause I love to work.
― Nathalie (stevienixed), Tuesday, 28 September 2010 10:06 (fourteen years ago) link
i have this. had an op a year or two ago for my sinuses as they said it was a deviated septum but it helped a bit, and now its bad again. doctor wants me to get another op but ive been putting it off as i dont want to have another op. maybe i should. but lack of sleep kills me and gives me awful head pains. have an inhaler but i cant tell if that helps anymore or not. so i just take paracetamol and do lots of deep nasal breathing.
― titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Tuesday, 28 September 2010 11:05 (fourteen years ago) link
My mom's speech teacher says humming helps for bad sinuses. I wonder if she's just testing how far she can pull my mom's leg (or would that be nose?). I mean for chrissakes, HUMMING? Anyway yeah sinuses suck as much as migraines :-(
― Nathalie (stevienixed), Tuesday, 28 September 2010 13:17 (fourteen years ago) link
I had been suffering from an apparently migraine attack the last couple of days. I had a prescription for some hardcore meds. But I was in doubt: if it wasn't a migraine attack, it wouldn't help and they are some hardcore meds (the list of side effects seem endless). My friend said: why the fuck do you read the paper, just pop the pill. I finally did. I feel so happy, like walking on clouds. Fuck me, migraine-less me is feeling happy happy. Now I realize how fucking crap migraines are. It really drains you.
― Nathalie (stevienixed), Thursday, 14 April 2011 15:08 (thirteen years ago) link
Anyone get Cluster Headaches?
Usually get them every other year but am getting "warning signs" that I'm going to get them a year early.
― djh, Thursday, 15 November 2012 22:15 (eleven years ago) link
^ Getting them now. Fucking fuck.
― djh, Friday, 7 March 2014 18:46 (ten years ago) link
Had mine from Christmas to the end of January, waking up every bloody night feeling like there's a knife in my eye. But it's over again for the moment. You never get used to them.
If only I could send this message to StanM 2009 : it's not trigeminal neuralgia you've got, even though some of the symptoms point that way, it's cluster headaches after all. Your beta blockers didn't actually help, you only thought so because it was just the end of that particular cluster. You'll get them every 2 years and they'll last for about a month, if the next five years are anything to go by. (oh, and try and lose some weight if you don't want to get a hernia in about 3 years)
― StanM, Friday, 7 March 2014 19:00 (ten years ago) link
How were you treating them? I used to only get mine in the night but they have moved to every 7 hours or so.
(Similarly, was prescribed antibiotics for years and always thought it just took six weeks worth ...)
― djh, Friday, 7 March 2014 21:15 (ten years ago) link
I didn't take anything because of the uncertainty (if it helps, is it the pills or the end of the cluster?), the only thing that worked was to either sit upright in bed (it would slowly fade away in waves during the next hour or so) or walk around (but it's not obvious to go walking around a quiet part of town at 3 or 3 AM without looking like a burglar looking for a target).
Good luck! Try everything you can think of that isn't dangerous or illegal and don't give up!
― StanM, Friday, 7 March 2014 21:34 (ten years ago) link
2 or 3 AM
― StanM, Friday, 7 March 2014 21:35 (ten years ago) link
Try everything: drink a lot of water, drink less water, skip meat, eat more meat, more vegetables, less vegetables, nuts, no nuts, greasy food, no greasy food, bread, no bread, fish, no fish, milk, no milk, be outside more, higher or lower temp on the thermostat, etc etc etc, I'm convinced there's a pattern or trigger but I haven't found mine yet.
― StanM, Friday, 7 March 2014 21:39 (ten years ago) link
I usually treat cluster patients for prevention with verapamil (take every day to keep the cluster away), or a short course of the steroid dexamethasone (start only when the cluster starts, to interrupt the cycle).
Acute treatment is tricky because the episodes are usually brief and medications take awhile to get absorbed from the stomach. Subcutaneous or intranasal sumatriptan is the fastest-acting option. 100% O2 by mask is effective in research trials but impractical in real life.
Cluster is circadian and related to hypothalamic/autonomic function, not typically associated with environmental triggers like migraine. Smoking and hard liquor are risk factors (but not necessary to develop the disorder). Milk, fish and bread or whatever are probably not the issue. Interestingly, hazel eyes, ruddy skin and furrowed facial features ("leonine facies") have been described as associations.
/neurologist
― Plasmon, Friday, 7 March 2014 23:42 (ten years ago) link
Thanking you!
Nothing skin- or face-related here. My partial heterochromia (brown sector in otherwise blue eyes) IS on the same (right) side my migraine is on, though.
― StanM, Saturday, 8 March 2014 02:17 (ten years ago) link
Yes, I use Sumatriptan 50 mg tablets plus oxygen or Sumatriptan injection. Problematically, I'm getting three or four attacks a day at the moment(which would take me over the allowed prescription of the injections). Didn't get on with Verapamil or steroids, at all.
― djh, Saturday, 8 March 2014 03:57 (ten years ago) link
If you're having that many attacks, you're in the middle of a cluster and steroids are indicated to interrupt the pattern. They usually work.
If you're having frequent clusters (ideally, you'd have 1-2 or fewer clusters -- bouts where you have 1 or more attacks per day on most days -- per year), you should be on an ongoing preventive like verapamil. Verapamil is usually effective even at modest doses, tends to be well tolerated.
If you get on the right regimen (sometimes easier said than done), you might be able to reduce the number of attacks to a handful per year, or even go a year or more between attacks.
― Plasmon, Saturday, 8 March 2014 05:34 (ten years ago) link
I'm apprehensive about taking something that fiddles with my heart like verapamil for the rest of my life for something completely different just because it happens to inexplicably seem to work :-/
― StanM, Saturday, 8 March 2014 05:51 (ten years ago) link
OK chief, that's your call.
― Plasmon, Saturday, 8 March 2014 07:43 (ten years ago) link
I'm lucky to only have it for about a month every couple of years at the moment, I might change my mind if it was more often.
― StanM, Saturday, 8 March 2014 07:48 (ten years ago) link
So what you need is a order for steroids that you can start as soon as the cluster does. Cut that month down to a couple of days. Stay off preventives (verapamil etc) if you can go years between clusters, they're only needed if the clusters are more frequent. When it finally recurs, knock it back again with the dex. Whack-a-mole style.
For people whose clusters are predictable by season (only get them in the fall or whatever), I put them on verapamil just during that window and then stop it until the same time next year.
― Plasmon, Saturday, 8 March 2014 07:51 (ten years ago) link
Thank you so much! ^ why can't I buy this person a gold star?
― StanM, Saturday, 8 March 2014 08:04 (ten years ago) link
Spoke to OUCH (Organisation for the Understanding of Cluster Headache)(UK)'s helpline today. They suggested not bothering with Sumatriptan tablets (too slow) but using the injections. They also suggested using Oxygen but continuing use for ten minutes after the pain stopped (likely to reduce rebounds). They mentioned the possibility of using Frovatriptan, which has a longer "shelf life" than Sumatriptan. They also mentioned Verapamil and steroids.
― djh, Saturday, 8 March 2014 21:27 (ten years ago) link
Frova's a decent idea for bridging during recurring attacks, because it stays in your system for 24 hrs or so. It's quite slow to start working, so it's next to useless for acute treatment of an attack that's just started. But it would likely prevent further attacks in that 24 hr window.
You're probably better off with a short course of steroids to interrupt the cluster: way cheaper than brand name triptans and very effective. Once the cluster "breaks", it often goes quiet for a nice long time.
Acute treatment in cluster should be considered as rescue therapy -- if needed more than rarely, it's a sign that other measures have failed.
― Plasmon, Sunday, 9 March 2014 01:47 (ten years ago) link
Ta.
(Yes, once I get to the end of this, it'll be two years before they happen again).
― djh, Sunday, 9 March 2014 20:58 (ten years ago) link
First migraine in two years. My main trigger is blocked sinuses, so I attribute this one to a very dry September where it hardly rained at all suddenly shifting to being very rainy today.
― wackness unlimited (snoball), Wednesday, 1 October 2014 20:08 (ten years ago) link
i've been getting migraine symptoms without the headache. light sensitivity/blurry vision/aura. am i going blind?
― Highland-Camrose Bungalow Village (get bent), Thursday, 4 December 2014 07:03 (nine years ago) link
curious about the post just above mine that mentions the change in the weather -- we just went from a long period of drought conditions to heavy rain.
― Highland-Camrose Bungalow Village (get bent), Thursday, 4 December 2014 07:05 (nine years ago) link
Sounds like: http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acephalgic_migraine
Barometric pressure changes can be a trigger for all sorts of migraine, including visual aura w/o headache.
― Plasmon, Friday, 5 December 2014 03:15 (nine years ago) link
That's interesting. I've noticed I often get migraines when we're in a high pressure cell, with dry air and bright skies, but my very worst migraines have been in suffocatingly hot and humid days of summer. By contrast, I seem to do fine with moderately cool, cloudy days, with or without light precipitation.
BTW I seem to recall reading somewhere that the Santa Ana winds (which are blasts of hot dry desert air funneled through the canyons and onto the southern California coastal plain) can also trigger migraines.
― never have i been a blue calm sea (collardio gelatinous), Friday, 5 December 2014 03:36 (nine years ago) link
Many migraine sufferers in western Canada have similar problems with the chinooks.
Triggers are always personal, but barometric pressure changes are a commone one.
― Plasmon, Friday, 5 December 2014 03:40 (nine years ago) link
Ah yes, the Chinooks. The same must apply to the mistral winds in the Mediterranean I imagine
― never have i been a blue calm sea (collardio gelatinous), Friday, 5 December 2014 03:56 (nine years ago) link
also the papyrus winds of the western arabian peninsula and the wing dings of australia.
sorry
― languagelessness (mattresslessness), Friday, 5 December 2014 05:14 (nine years ago) link
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foehn_windhttp://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katabatic_wind
Yes, all those silly silly names for silly silly winds, how foolish of people to suffer from something you've never heard of.
― Plasmon, Friday, 5 December 2014 06:45 (nine years ago) link
this piece from a cluster headache sufferer is really descriptive
The headache was an unwanted guest. And my unwanted guest was a serial killer with an ice pick. When the right side of my face started to tingle, I would announce, “He’s coming.” This headache became personified. This pain took a pronoun. I planned my days around him, like how I planned my travels around snow when I lived in upstate New York. In my daily planner, I blocked out the hours between one and six. I would be occupied during those times, writing in my planner: “Down time.”
http://blog.longreads.com/2015/01/13/a-meditation-on-pain/
― groundless round (La Lechera), Tuesday, 13 January 2015 21:09 (nine years ago) link
Cluster Headaches are such weird things. A year to the week of my last attack, I've got a "shadow" - pain in the same place as a cluster headache and with some of the same symptoms but with a lot less actual pain (say 3/10 instead of 10/10). I generally get actual cluster headaches proper every 18-24 months.
― djh, Tuesday, 31 March 2015 22:14 (nine years ago) link
Was expecting cluster headaches in March/April but (thankfully) haven't experienced them. Ridiculously, I don't have a clear idea of when I get them (I've had them in spring and autumn) but its more or less every two years (I can actually track the last few years by checking my whinging on email).
Anyway, I've been experiencing the slightly freaky insomnia that seems to somehow precede an attack ... and it has been making me wonder if anything has changed advice-wise in the last two years?
― djh, Wednesday, 1 June 2016 23:14 (eight years ago) link
I still use the same approach. Had 2 cluster patients in headache clinic this morning: one already on verapamil, the other I started it at a low dose. Gave them both scripts for dexamethasone and sumatriptan nasal spray.
I ordered them both CT angiograms but realized in doing so that I've got nearly 6 years experience in practice now, and have never once found an underlying structural or vascular lesion to explain cluster.
Most of my cluster patients do well, eventually stop coming to follow up appointments. I tend to run late in clinic (talk too much), keep people waiting for 20 minutes or more. If there's nothing to do but renew the prescriptions and banter about the weather, I can understand why they don't feel they need to bother.
― Plasmon, Friday, 3 June 2016 04:52 (eight years ago) link
Thanks Plasmon.
Is the nasal spray recommended over the injections?
― djh, Saturday, 4 June 2016 21:27 (eight years ago) link
Either/or. Nasal spray may be a little easier, plus you can aim at the affected side. Most people say it tastes gross though. But then some people don't like using injectors.
― Plasmon, Monday, 6 June 2016 19:17 (eight years ago) link
I got some zinc/magnesium/calcium supplements which I keep forgetting to take, but it occurs to me that the past 3 (?) times I actually remembered to take them I had a migraine that evening. Coincidence?
(Probably, as I haven't worked out my triggers. Certainly the last time it happened i.e. yesterday there were several other candidates, mainly stress and a weather change/getting too hot and dehydrated.)
― a passing spacecadet, Monday, 6 June 2016 21:42 (eight years ago) link
Also tbh I'm not entirely sure these are migraines but I've been getting more and more of whatever they are lately.
I used to get infrequent and rather mild/shortlived* migraines which were unmistakeable as they came with aura, but these ones do not, so I'm not 100% sure they feel the same. However, they are approximately one-sided, come with nausea and often photophobia and/or neck pain, so I think signs point to yes.
Interestingly they also feel a lot like a more intense version of the nauseous headaches I get at certain times of the month (i.e. hormonal), which I hadn't been classing as migraines because it feels kind of insulting to use the word for something not completely debilitating, but perhaps they're all on a spectrum. Or perhaps they are 3 different things altogether. But anyway.
* at least in comparison to all the other accounts I've heard, still horrible though. it occurs to me that the thread title is "hardcore migraine sufferers unite" and I have outed myself as a very softcore migraine sufferer
― a passing spacecadet, Monday, 6 June 2016 21:49 (eight years ago) link
I'm fairly certain that this thread can tolerate very softcore migraine sufferers ...
― djh, Monday, 13 June 2016 19:35 (eight years ago) link
So, have there been any new wonder-treatments for Cluster Headaches?
― djh, Saturday, 7 January 2017 00:42 (seven years ago) link
Actually, getting proper ones now ... I did just think I'd had my worst ever single attack but I think that's probably just a reflection of how much I go into denial between episodes.
― djh, Saturday, 7 January 2017 00:44 (seven years ago) link
Anyone know anything about nerve blocks for cluster headaches? (Basically, are they effective/worth having?)
― djh, Monday, 9 January 2017 22:37 (seven years ago) link
I finally found good meds. Excedrine. Pop two pills and usually they subside.
― nathom, Wednesday, 11 January 2017 16:55 (seven years ago) link
Psilocybin and LSD appear to have promise with migraines/cluster headaches.
― Kiarostami bag (milo z), Wednesday, 11 January 2017 17:00 (seven years ago) link