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Chronic Headache Treatment

chronic headache treatment

Both aspirin and acetaminophen have been used in the treatment of headaches since the 19th century.

exertion headache treatmnet

Physicians have no general and definitive set of tests for diagnosing headaches.

Symptoms Headaches



Chronic Migraine
Headaches - Preventive Medications


While treating a headache can be effective in dealing with headaches, prevention is an even better approach. It is much more desirable to prevent the headache than to treat the resulting pain. People who get migraines should especially be careful since the pain of migraines is so intense and disruptive to daily activities.

To attack that problem, so-called prophylactic drugs are often recommended as part of a spectrum of treatments. The term may be familiar to those who have used condoms. The meaning is similar. They're used to prevent a certain result, in this case headache pain, before it occurs rather than treating it afterwards. The latter type are termed 'abortive', and have a similar meaning to the common one - they eliminate or counteract an effect after it has happened.

In some cases that prevention may take the form of lifestyle adjustments. Alcohol, particularly red wine, can be a trigger for some migraine sufferers. Excessive activity, even something as mild as walking up steps, does it for others. Lack of sleep, stress, missing meals... the list is long. Adjusting behavior, even though requiring willpower, is often the easiest and safest way to prevent a headache before it strikes.

But for many, drugs are the best answer.

Preventive medicines come in a variety of classes, such as beta-blockers, channel-blockers and others. Sometimes they're combined with or used for drugs to treat other conditions, but have the 'side-effect' of treating headaches or migraines.

Beta-blockers, for example, are used to treat heart conditions, but they are also often effective in preventing migraines. They prevent blood vessels from dilating, thought to be one factor in migraines. Since they also help treat cardiac or chest pain (angina) and high blood pressure, in some cases they will work to relieve triggers for migraine.

Channel-blockers are another kind of heart pill that is also used as migraine prevention. Typically in the form of so-called CCBs (Calcium Channel Blockers), they work by reducing or blocking calcium from entering heart muscle cells. Calcium is essential in the biochemistry that allows the heart to function, but too much can be a problem. Since they reduce heart action, they sometimes have the side-effect of reducing the odds of migraine.

Some anti-depressant medications can be useful in treating headaches and migraine, since depression is one of the possible triggers of an attack. Prevent one cause, and the odds of the effect are reduced. Amitriptyline and doxepin are two common drugs of this type, and they have a painkilling effect as well at low doses.

Anti-seizure medications are sometimes used as part of a preventive strategy. Migraines and seizures have some similar neurological features. One such is a condition afflicting about 20% of migraine sufferers - auras or prodromes. These are a set of symptoms, such as flashes of light or loss of vision, that are precursors to a migraine episode.

Anti-serotonin medications are another possible treatment. Contemporary research suggests that serotonin (a neurotransmitter in the brain) plays an important role in migraines. Using a compound that can substitute in nerve cell receptors for serotonin, while having a slightly different structure, can prevent an attack.

There is not one single medicine that is accepted as the right preventative treatment of headaches. You should always check with your doctor when considering taking a new drug. Ask your doctor for an evaluation and advice on all treatment possibilities.

Some, such as those produced by high altitudes (a condition called AMS - acute mountain sickness) respond very well to ibuprofen.



Contemporary research suspects the interaction of serotonin (a neurotransmitter) with nerve cells is responsible, but no one knows for sure.
Typically in the form of so-called CCBs (Calcium Channel Blockers), they work by reducing or blocking calcium from entering heart muscle cells. You should not take these medicines without first meeting with your physician and understanding all of the side effects and adverse risks. Altering the level of calcium in a Bufferin-like medication (composed of aspirin and buffered with calcium carbonate) can make a difference for some people.

 

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For the majority, treatment with triptans and other drugs continues to be the most common route. Since it works by changing blood composition, as does aspirin, anyone who has had heart surgery should avoid it. As always, talk with your doctor prior to taking medicines. In most cases, that's a perfectly safe course of action. There is no widely accepted definitive cause of headaches.