(no subject)
Mar. 8th, 2005 07:48 pmanother migraine. i don't know what triggers these off. i haven't done anything out of the ordinary today or anything.
i was told some years ago by a headache doctor that they weren't "real" migraines, but just tension-related hedaches or something. and that if i relaxed they would go away. which kind of feels like i'm being blamed for them
but i don't see how. i get kpain, right now mainly behind and a little to the above of my left eye, along with strong light aversion and not liking nloise. they have been incapacitating and i hope they aren't again. if i get a bad one nothing i take seems to stop it.
i need to fix this. it was supposed to be fixed already.
i was told some years ago by a headache doctor that they weren't "real" migraines, but just tension-related hedaches or something. and that if i relaxed they would go away. which kind of feels like i'm being blamed for them
but i don't see how. i get kpain, right now mainly behind and a little to the above of my left eye, along with strong light aversion and not liking nloise. they have been incapacitating and i hope they aren't again. if i get a bad one nothing i take seems to stop it.
i need to fix this. it was supposed to be fixed already.
no subject
Date: 2005-03-08 12:00 pm (UTC)*gentle hugs*
no subject
Date: 2005-03-08 12:05 pm (UTC)i drink tea, no coffee.
they haven't been as bad as there were in 2002/2003, when they were quite unmanageable. i was able to work today, for example. but they are worse than they were a year ago, say.
no subject
Date: 2005-03-08 12:23 pm (UTC)Could you switch to decaf tea? the caffeine in colas and that's in almost all migraine meds will be able to help more the more foreign it is to your system.
*thinks* I'd recommend keeping a diary of what you've eaten and been around as well, if you haven't tried so already. Red meat, mature cheese, and alcohol sometimes trigger migraines in me. (And cigarette smoke always.) Which doesn't mean I have to avoid them completely, I just have to be very mindful.
Also, meds that I think you take, are known to often cause migraines, because one of their side effects is how they restrict blood flow to the brain. Not sure, if that's it, there's much to be done :/
no subject
Date: 2005-03-08 12:30 pm (UTC)i generally take either ibuprofen (generic name) or migraleve (a brand, dunno what's in it). mainly ibp at the moment. today i have taken the maximum dosage and no real effect.
i did try going without any for a few weeks, a couple of years back, and i was generally better but it did mean i had to sacrifice entire days. i can function now, it just hurts.
no subject
Date: 2005-03-08 12:05 pm (UTC)Slice a raw potato, sprinkle black pepper on one side of the slices, lie down, put the slices on your forehead pepper side down and tie around your head with a scarf. Relax for a while in the dark.
no subject
Date: 2005-03-08 12:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-03-08 12:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-03-08 12:45 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-03-08 12:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-03-08 12:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-03-08 01:11 pm (UTC)My migraines are triggered mostly by stress or the not-restful sleep that accompanies it (exponentially increasing stress only - like exams or a deadline that I have not left myself much time to meet), skipped meals combined with too much coffee and last, but not least, certain types of florescent lighting (the type that seems favoured in sports halls).
I can usually predict them now based on this knowledge - and I have fewer so I might be averting them.
Good luck with working out your triggers. By the way, some people are triggered not by stress but by the relief of stress and also by oversleeping - I think the word balance is key somewhere. ;)
no subject
Date: 2005-03-08 03:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-03-09 03:14 am (UTC)And utterly incapacitating migraines.
Migraines are almost utterly untreatable, with strong drugs being really only any use for speeding recovering.
Really bad headaches are of course terrible and incapacitating, but having had both I can appreciate why a headache doctor distinguishes. (I certainly do).
I would love to have neither.
My migraines are triggered by a sudden drop in stress/increase in stress or general change in mood. (My first migraine being on a birthday as a child), mine are short-lived (I believe) at around 4 hours, when they then become an extremely painful light sensitive headache... but soooo much nicer than the migraine... for about the same amount of time.
One particular aspect of migraines I utterly hate, is that fact it also incapacitates me the following day, I end up in what I guess would be called a disassociated state (common in depressives I believe) for pretty much the whole day.
no subject
Date: 2005-03-09 12:39 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-03-09 12:42 pm (UTC)what does this mean? :)
no subject
Date: 2005-03-09 12:50 pm (UTC)