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When is it Time to Use Migraine Preventive Medication?

September 6th, 2008


When is it time to use Migraine preventive medications?  It has been a difficult decision for me, as it may be for many of you.  There are clear medical guidelines, and recent research that backs them up.  And yet it is not an easy step to take.

3 or more Migraine attacks per month

Headache specialists will generally prescribe Migraine preventives if you have 3 or more Migraine attacks per month.  My HA doctor told me his guideline is one per week, on average (which sounds very much like 3 or more per month).  If you think about it, a Migraine every week, or nearly every week, is a threshold level for having a serious disabling impact on your life.   Every week you will lose hours or a day or more to pain, photophobia, nausea, whatever package of symptoms you tend to have.  You will miss work, family time, social time.  You will waste hours in a darkened room.

Silent Brain Damage

There’s more to it than the impact on our daily lives.  Recent research shows that Migraine attacks at a frequency of 3 or more per month, over an extended period of time, leads to brain damage.  The evidence is now very strong that Migraine is a progressive brain disease; it worsens over time.  The more frequent, and longer time since onset of Migraine attacks, the greater risk of damage.  The damage shows up as lesions in the white matter of the brain.  The researchers called it “silent brain damage” because there are no known effects of this damage – yet.

Teri Robert, author of Living Well with Migraine Disease and Headaches, discussed the implications of this research in her recent article on My Migraine Connection,  “Yes, Migraines can Cause Brain Damage.”  Teri gives us an excellent explanation of the research, concluding that:

Migraineurs who experience frequent Migraine attacks and / or have a long history of Migraines are at increased risk of “silent brain damage,” brain damage that (so far) does not seem to cause any symptoms. This again shows that reducing the frequency of Migraine attacks (aka Migraine headaches) is critical.

So why wouldn’t you go on preventives?

I have averaged 7 Migraine attacks per month for the last 9 months.  I have been considering preventive medication for the last 8 months.  My hesitation comes from:

I suspect that many of you who are reluctant to try preventives have some of the same reasons.  Please do leave a comment to share your thinking.

I will be starting preventive medication in less than two weeks when I next see my headache specialist.  I believe in a holistic approach to dealing with Migraines,
including (among other things)  relaxation, meditation, rest, exercise, physical therapy, massage, diet,
trigger-avoidance, and appropriate use of
medications.   At this point, preventive medication is appropriate!  I need to stop losing 6 – 9 days a month to Migraines.

I have my hesitations about the “better living by chemistry” theory.  I think there are inherent conflicts involved in our pharmaceutical production being governed by a profit motive.  However,
that does not mean that drugs don’t save lives and prevent or mitigate disability.  We need drugs
available, and we need much better choices in drugs than we have now.  Holistic approaches
can reduce Migraine frequency, they can help, but cannot change our inherent neurological make-up.  I use supplements and diet to care for my overall health, but if I got appendicitis you bet I would go willingly to that surgeon.  Knowing that I am at risk of brain damage, you bet I will take the drugs that reduce that risk.

– Megan Oltman

Embarking on the pharmaceutical unknown.  Wish me luck!

Pill image courtesy of [O*] ‘BharaT; brain image courtesy of Gaetan Lee.

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Posted in Managing, Medicine | Comments (4)

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