Thursday, July 9, 2009

6 Reasons Your Headache Treatment Is Failing You


1. Wrong Diagnosis

Many times a patient will tell his or her doctor that they get migraines when it rains and automatically the doctor labels the person as having allergies or sinus headaches, Newman said. Or, if the migraine is precipitated by stressful situations, the patient may be labeled as an anxious person who has tension headaches, and often these are really migraines, so now the patient is not going to get the right medication.

“Also, many doctors are under the impression that a migraine is one-sided and 40 percent of migraine sufferers get pain on both sides of the head,” Newman said. “Seventy percent of patients get weather-related headaches.”

2. Right Diagnosis, Wrong Treatment

Perhaps you know you have migraines — but you aren’t taking the correct medication, Newman said.

“If you have a migraine and are nauseous, an over-the-counter medicine like Tylenol is not going to be strong enough,” he added. “You are more likely to respond to an anti-inflammatory like Aleve, but the overwhelming majority needs a prescription for a medicine that will treat the associated symptoms (light sensitivity, nausea).”

3. Right Medication, But Wrong Dose


Newman said prescription migraine medications should always be prescribed in their highest doses.

“If doctors start you out at the lowest dose, it’s not going to work,” Newman said. “You should only go to a lower dose if there is a side effect.”

4. Right Dose, Right Medication, Wrong Formulation

If your migraines are accompanied by severe nausea and vomiting and you can’t keep a pill down, Newman suggested finding a nasal spray or injection version of the migraine medicine that works best for you.

5. Delaying Treatment

Migraine sufferers commonly delay taking their medication, thinking “Let me just wait this out,” or “Let’s see how long I can go before I have to absolutely take my medicine.”

This is dangerous for two reasons, Newman said.

a.) You run the risk of the drug not working at all.

b.) The drug might work for a short period of time, but then the headache will come back.

Always treat your migraine within the first 40 minutes of onset, Newman said.

6. Overusing Medication


Taking acute medication for migraines or tension headaches more than twice a week can actually cause more headaches, Newman said.

So, how do you stop the cycle of pain?

Certain drugs, including those that treat migraines, can actually trigger rebound headaches, so consider talking to your health care provider about taking a preventative medication.

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