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Migraine Blue - The Goal Is To Be Free of Migraine

 
Migraineblue is my life now.My goal is to be migraine free.To be be able to be outside and look up at the sky the way I used to,with joy,not fear. To be free to live.

Migraine Blue - June 2008

Zap it to me now,Why Wait?

June 28th 2008 01:55




Magnetic Device Could Zap Migraines

NEW YORK, June 27, 2008
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(CBS) A strange-looking device may be able to stop a migraine in its tracks. That could be good news for the estimated 30 million Americans who suffer from the condition.

It’s called Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation - or TMS. The patient puts a device on the back of the head, and pushes a button, sending a magnetic pulse into the skull, CBS News medical correspondent Dr. Jon LaPook reports.

"It actually generates a very small amount of current that flows through the brain and the assumption is that current is what turns off the migraine attack," said Dr. Richard Lipton of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine.

About 25 percent of migraine headaches are preceded by what's called an aura, including visual changes like flashing lights, zigzag patterns and blind spots. The idea is to use the device at the first sign of an aura.

"People can treat a headache when they feel it coming on," Lipton said.

In results released today by Lipton, a shareholder in the company that makes a device, TMS treatment stopped migraines in 40 percent of patients - twice as effective as placebo.

"There are a lot of patients who can't take the prescription drugs that are available for migraine, and this gives me a whole new avenue of therapy,” Lipton said.

There are medications currently available that have been extremely effective at stopping migraines, but they do have side effects. So if the FDA approves this device, it could be a welcome alternative.

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Ok,so the study is done.If this device can help,why,why,why, make people wait...let me think.Oh,I know,I got it...competition for prescription meds.
And who wants an alternative without side effects.After all,taking certain meds can cause side effects and that could mean more meds to help those side effects and on and on.
Not to mention,well this med didn't work,so we'll switch you.Or oh my,a new med out that is really better than what you're taking now,or what you've been taking stops working,so let's switch.
We're a civilized country here in the USA.So why would we make people suffer?It's all in the name of money.
I don't know about you,but I'm tired of the pain.I have chronic migraine now,but my level goes up so high at times,I feel like this is the big one...When it wasn't chronic,I remember the fear I had of the next migraine attack.
Look,they know people miss work,it's costing companies money.But the big companies that make our meds the power.I remember there were all sorts of songs when I was growing up,Power to the People.Right.
Civilized,no I don't think so.


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It's enough to make me scream

June 18th 2008 21:15



Oh,the migraine pain


It's been quite a roller coaster ride.
So,I've been out of the game,so to speak,due to migraine pain.It is just miserable to say the least.The pain is everything.Before I open my eyes in the morning,the pain is so bad I don't want to open my eyes.I thought maybe I was having a heart attack the other night as the pain was so bad in my jaws,and severe pain on both sides of my neck that I had never had experienced.It's enough to make me scream.
The heat,the pollen,the storms.So,I decided to look up some others that might be suffering in the public eye.



http://www.ksfy.com
By Brian Allen

Story Created: Jun 6, 2008 at 9:39 PM CDT

Story Updated: Jun 6, 2008 at 11:10 PM CDT

Today I worked the entire day with a migraine headache. A blinding, painful, avoid bright lights kind of headache. It stayed with me all day. After the 6 o'clock news, I just laid my head down on my desk and tried to relax and not ramp up my stress level and make the headache worse.

I have had headaches like these for years. But it has been probably two years or so since I have had one time bad. I took some pain reliever (thanks Nancy!) and soldiered on. At least I tried. I wasn't as effective today as I could have been and it makes me feel a little bad.

I remember once getting a migraine while I was working in Las Vegas and once I got home, I spent the entire night pouring hot water over my head, trying to dull the pain. After a while the pain left; I don't know if my water treatment did any good or if the migraine passed on it's own, but it hurt!

I talked to a doctor a long time ago and he belives my migraines (like most migraines) are triggered by stress. He gave me some medicine he said would help me but what it did, more than anything, was cloud by thinking and make me feel a little loopy. I didn't like it at all. To me, to walk around in that state is almost worse that just sitting there and suffering.

So this weekend (tomorrow at least) I think I am going to try and take it easy. I think I will try and get some sleep (as much sleep as one can get with two young sons in the house).

Hopefully it goes away soon. I've never had a migraine start on one day and carry over into the next. Hopefully that's not how this plays out. I am typing this blog on a white screen and even this is starting to hurt.


Ravens Central
Sun reporters coverage of the Baltimore RavensJune 18, 2008
Injury report
Third-round pick and offensive tackle Oniel Cousins returned to rookie minicamp today after sitting out yesterday with recurring migraines. But seventh-round pick Allen Patrick did not participate today after injuring his left hamstring yesterday.

“Allen tweaked his hamstring,” coach John Harbaugh said of the running back from Oklahoma. “He’s been fighting that, really, since he got here. He’s going to have to work hard on that for the next couple of weeks and get healthy.”


Baltimoresun.com

Notes // Rookie offensive tackle Oniel Cousins walked off the practice field because of a recurrence of migraines about 40 minutes into the first session of rookie minicamp yesterday. "He had migraines again," Harbaugh said after practice. "We've got migraines going around, I guess, on the offensive line. He had to come out because of the migraines." ... Harbaugh said the team might keep having its rookie camp after organized team activities and minicamps. "They're so much further along than if we would've had this camp in the beginning before they had been through the offense twice," Harbaugh said. "For a lot of these guys, it's their third time through the offense, and it showed up today in their ability to operate the offense and run the routes and make the adjustments."

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22 Apr 2008 Medical News Today

People with migraine are more likely to experience exacerbated skin sensitivity or pain after non-painful daily activities such as rubbing one's head, combing one's hair and wearing necklaces or earrings, compared to people with other types of headache, according to a study published in the April 22, 2008, issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

Researchers surveyed 16,573 people with headache about their type of headache, frequency, quality of life, depression and other illnesses that cause pain. The survey identified 11,737 participants with migraine, 1,491 with probable migraine (individuals have all but one of the symptoms required for migraine diagnosis) and 3,345 with another kind of headache.

The study found that 68 percent of those who reported almost daily headaches (chronic migraine) and 63 percent of those with episodic migraines reported allodynia, the name of this intensified and unpleasant, painful skin sensitivity. Forty-two percent of people with probable migraine reported the skin pain compared to 37 percent of those with daily or tension headache.

"This condition causes discomfort or pain even during everyday activities like touching one's hair or putting on clothes," said study author Marcelo E. Bigal, MD, PhD, with Albert Einstein College of Medicine in Bronx, NY. "More importantly, this condition may be a risk factor for migraine progression, where individuals have migraines on more days than not. Identifying risk factors for progression is a very important public health priority. For example, it may be that individuals with allodynia should be more aggressively treated in order to prevent migraine progression, as well as to decrease this sensitivity on the skin."

The study also found this type of skin pain was more common in women with migraine and people with migraine who were obese or had depression.

The study was supported by the National Headache Foundation through a grant from Ortho-McNeil Neurologics, Inc.

The American Academy of Neurology, an association of more than 21,000 neurologists and neuroscience professionals, is dedicated to improving patient care through education and research. A neurologist is a doctor with specialized training in diagnosing, treating and managing disorders of the brain and nervous system such as stroke, Alzheimer's disease, epilepsy, Parkinson's disease, and multiple sclerosis.

For more information about the American Academy of Neurology, visit http://www.aan.com.

American Academy of Neurology (AAN)
1080 Montreal Ave.
St. Paul, MN 55116
United States
http://www.neurology.org
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This is a great article.You don't know how many times I want to pull my hair out by the roots.When the roots of my hair hurt so bad,there are a few ways I deal with the pain.
I take a towel and wrap it snug on my head.
I get up and wash my hair,but have to be careful when brushing it out.I use my fingers for separating my hair near the roots.
Sometimes, all I can do is put pressur on the parts of my hair that hurt the worst.
I will take an abortive med,if I'm lucky,it will make it more tolerable.
Other times,I just have to get through it.When I first started getting this type of pain,I thought I was crazy.Until I'd see complaints from people saying the same thing.
Sometimes,I've caused this to trigger just by brushing my hair,I'll forget and the brush hits my roots,oops.So,I have to remember, a simple thing like that can really make me suffer.




http://mymigraines.com/
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About Last Night

June 6th 2008 00:30


So,what better week to have a migraine meltdown than National Headache Awareness Week.And last night was BAD


[ Click here to read more ]
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Summer,bbq's.picnics,sitting on a swing feeling a summer breeze.Blue sky,green grass,family get togethers.Going to the park,walking down the path around a local lake.
Those are my dreams....very little of that will be reality for me


[ Click here to read more ]
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