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Say Goodbye to Headaches
by Susan Weiner
December 8, 1999
What's in a name? A headache by
any other name hurts just as much. But categorizing your
headache can be as overwhelming as finding an obscure
breakfast cereal at the supermarket. Medical folks
pigeonhole headaches as tension headaches, allergy
headaches, morning headaches and sinus headaches, plus the
organic, migraine, cluster, trauma, TMJ, eyestrain, rebound,
exertion, hormonal and muscle tension varieties. You may
also suffer the self-induced hangover and toxicity
headaches.
Americans are no strangers to self-medication, and as a
society we battle these headaches by consuming nearly 80
billion tablets of aspirin each year, about 20 million
aspirins a day, according to Burton Goldberg, co-author of
An Alternative Medicine Definitive Guide to Headaches
(Future Medicine Publishing). And while we drown ourselves
in over-the-counter and powerful prescription products, our
tolerance, just like a drug addict's, grows. So what begins
as a twodose headache slowly evolves into three, four or
five doses, until you realize that no dosage can make your
headache go away.
Unless you're fond of medieval practices such as
ritualistic healings and bloodletting, drugs seem the only
answer to headache misery. But even modern medicine has been
unable to solve headaches. Rather than a cure, medications
provide only temporary relief, and even that isn't
guaranteed. Additionally, over-reliance on medications can
lead to chronic head pain. According to Goldberg, rebound
headaches often result from the consumption and withdrawal
of drugs.
Halt Your Headaches
Rather than strive to simply eliminate headache pain, why
not identify the underlying cause and prevent the headache?
Almost always, every type of headache results from a health
or lifestyle-related activity. In an ideal world, the best
approach would be to eliminate the tensions, stress,
frustrations, anger, insufficient sleep, excessive drinking
and poor diet that contribute to your headaches. For better
or for worse, however, you can't always: a. quit your job;
b. ask your spouse to leave; c. sit on the beach all day; or
d. all of the above. But you can make appropriate lifestyle
changes and learn to express suppressed feelings.
This approach, lifestyle modification, is a treatment
program based on a Loma Linda University study, originally
published in Medical Hypothesis and the Journal of Women's
Health and Gender-Based Medicine and later explained in No
More Headaches, No More Migraines: A Proven Approach to
Preventing Headaches and Migraines by Zuzana Bic, DrPH and
L. Francis Bic, PhD (Avery). The program, conducted on a
group diagnosed with chronic migraines, dramatically
decreased the frequency, intensity and duration of headaches
in nine of 10 headache sufferers. Rather than demand radical
life changes, the lifestyle modification program introduces
gradual changes in three specific areas: nutrition, exercise
and understanding stress. The study doesn't expect you to
change your entire diet, join a gym and eliminate everything
that triggers stress, but teaches techniques to make subtle
lifestyle changes and reduce the impact of daily stress.
These same techniques can also improve sleep patterns, a
factor known to affect headaches. The lifestyle modification
approach clarifies that while very few headaches directly
result from existing acute conditions, recurring headaches
often derive from a larger lifestyle factor. If these issues
are ignored, the body's natural defense mechanisms may kick
into overdrive and become exhausted, leaving you susceptible
to other chronic diseases. By finding and eliminating the
cause of your headaches, you may be saving yourself from
other eventual illnesses.
Natural Alternatives
Willing to make some lifestyle changes and step away from
medications? Try these remedies, courtesy of Nature's
Pharmacy by Lynn Paige Walker, PharmD and Ellen Hodgson
Brown, JD (Prentice-Hall).
For simple headaches, start with relaxation and neck
stretches. Or try rubbing your forehead with peppermint oil,
a natural antispasmodic and diuretic shown in German
research to be as effective as acetaminophen in easing
tension headaches.
Never underestimate the old-fashioned ice pack to the
forehead as an effective treatment that works by
constricting the swollen blood vessels that cause your head
to ache. If the ice pack isn't enough, try putting your arms
in icy water up to your elbows to constrict additional blood
vessels. But if it's a sinus headache you're fighting, take
the opposite approach and try hot compresses.
The herbal, and original, form of aspirin is white willow
bark. Used by Chinese practitioners 2,500 years ago, it
contains salicin, nearly the same pain reliever found in
aspirin. Other herbal aspirins include meadowsweet tea, just
as effective as aspirin with few side effects. For
migraines, Walker and Brown recommend feverfew and magnesium
supplements, which reduce nerve excitability and migraine
susceptibility. In fact, individuals with frequent headaches
have been found to have low brain and tissue magnesium, says
Julian Whitaker, MD, author of Julian Whitaker's Guide to
Natural Healing (Prima). For all headaches, Goldberg
suggests essential fatty acid supplementation with evening
primrose oil (EPO), which improves circulation, helps
regulate inflammation and relieves pain.
The Curse of the Migraine
Migraines, a debilitating headache distinguished by a
throbbing pain, may be humanity's oldest malady. The name is
derived from the word the Greek physician Galen used to
describe the disorder in 200 A.D. Six-thousand-year-old
Sumerian writings refer to the ravages of migraines, and
prehistoric skeletons bear testimony to a crude form of
trephination-holes chiseled in skulls to allow the escape of
pain-creating demons, according to Lifetime Encyclopedia of
Natural Remedies by Myra Cameron (Parker Publishing).
In the common migraine, throbbing pain develops gradually
from distended veins around the brain and may be accompanied
by nausea, vomiting and sensitivity to light. These miseries
can be preceded by 15 to 90 minutes of an "aura," which
includes visual disturbances, distorted perception,
hallucinations, flashes of light and temporary loss of sight
or hearing. In fact, skeptical historians attribute some of
the religious visions of the Middle Ages to the visual
effects of migraine aura, according to Cameron.
Snacking on high fiber foods between three light meals
each day helps stabilize blood sugar and prevent migraines.
And while some doctors summarily attribute migraines to
diet, other experts attribute at least half of all migraines
to food sensitivities. The most common edible villains are
aged cheeses, yeast breads, chocolate, cured meats, citrus
fruits, eggs, fermented foods, wheat, milk, milk products,
alcoholic drinks and food additives, including nitrates and
MSG.
Suggested daily supplements for migraine-susceptible
individuals include a multivitamin, one capsule of B complex
to help maintain normal vascular control, 3,000 to 6,000
milligrams in divided doses of vitamin C with bioflavonoids
to assist the production of anti-stress hormones, and 500 to
1,000 milligrams of magnesium to reduce nerve excitability
and pain. At the onset of a migraine, says Cameron, try
homeopathic remedies, dilutions of natural substances from
plants, minerals and animals. For throbbing pain, take
natrum muriaticum according to package directions. Other
homeopathic options to explore include iris versicolar, lac
defloratum and sanguinaria.
Take Charge of Your Headaches
Headache management involves managing your life. Practice
relaxation techniques to reduce stress. Calmly discuss your
feelings. Take a leisurely stroll at lunch. Walk your dog,
or a neighbor's dog, after dinner. Keep a food diary. Sit
and stand tall. Skip the fast food tonight. Join a yoga
class. Take vitamins and supplements. Get a two-hour
massage. Turn the television off earlier and sleep in a
little later.
Taking the time to care may take effort, but it will soon
become second nature. Invest in yourself. It's your most
precious possession.
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