February 18th, 2008
Breaking the Headache Cycle by Ian Livingstone, M.D. and Donna Novak, R.N.
When my migraine pattern suddenly shifted from once month or less to three to four times per week, I went to see Dr. Livingstone. When I first saw him in August of 2004, it was six months after I had two episodes of anaphylactic shock, caused by ibuprofen. I was a little gun-shy of trying new medications. I did agree to try Imitrex – I needed to be able to abort my attacks. But instead of preventive medications, Dr. Livingstone suggested that I get into a regular relaxation routine – using deep breathing, meditation and
guided imagery to strengthen my nervous system’s relaxation response.
I first read the book at that time: Breaking the Headache Cycle: A Proven Program for Treating and Preventing Recurring Headaches. I took on practicing meditation daily, and after about six months I found my migraines reduced to 2 or 3 per month. The methods outlined in the book were very effective for me, in combination with the migraine abortive, to reduce my migraines to a manageable level.
The authors say migraineurs’ nervous systems are “very reactive to any change, even good change. This
sensitivity is the hallmark of the migraine condition. Unless it is understood and recognized, the migraine disorder cannot be adequately treated.”
If our nervous systems are over-responsive, it makes sense that relaxation and meditation will calm down the responsiveness of the nervous system. Dr. Livingstone cites studies showing that preventive medications reduce migraine about 40% on average (the book was published in 2003 – there may be more up to date statistics on this); and other studies showing that a regular relaxation practice reduces migraines 40% on average. Is it a safe bet to say if doing both, we might reduce migraine 80%? That’s a number I could be very happy with!
Many times I pause and do deep breathing when I first feel pain in my head, or even just when I feel my tension mount. This often down-shifts me from a budding migraine back to a state of no head pain. I have come to be able to notice when I am getting too excited or too engaged – it’s not just negative
stress that can trigger me! Not surprisingly, when I got out of the habit of practicing regular relaxation, my migraines increased again. As tricky as
it is to remember to take a variety of medications, in the right amounts, at
the right times, I think it is even more challenging to establish and keep a
routine of putting the busy concerns of life aside and take time out to look
inward, breathe deep, become aware of the body, calm oneself, and relax.
I came to these methods already convinced – I was not a stranger to yoga, meditation and relaxation. I had practiced yoga in many periods in my life, starting in my teens, and meditation and guided imagery from my early twenties. Later, as a life and business coach, I have used meditation and guided imagery with my clients to help them get clear about issues that were stopping them, and to visualize what they wanted in their lives. So I wasn’t surprised that this practice would aid with migraine disease as well. The challenge is
keeping it in my life as all the demands of life crowd in. The reward is getting to know my own system
really well, and gaining at least a little bit of control over it.
By the way, I think preventive medication is a great thing, and many migraineurs find a lot of success with it. I may be headed down that path myself, as my migraine pattern has changed and my treatment will need to change too. But I’ll always keep relaxation as part of my routine. It makes me feel good!
– Megan Oltman
Nothing to gain from pain!
Tags: Breaking the Headache Cycle, Ian Livingstone MD, Migraine attack, Migraine preventive medication, reactive nervous system, relaxation practice
Posted in Books, Managing, Medicine, Tips & Techniques | Comments (2)
February 6th, 2008
A week or two ago I posted about living healthy – a few comments there got me thinking (again) about just how challenging this is. Getting it all right really does feel like a full-time job. It’s time-consuming-picky-detail-oriented, and doesn’t fit with the way most “normal” people live their lives. (By the way, I’m still interested in finding one of those “normal” people – if you spot one, let me know!)
This morning I am off to the doctor for a general health consult. I have a lot of questions for him and wanted to go in when I wasn’t feeling awful, for once, and would be more able to pay attention. I’m feeling okay today – not great but okay. Okay is good, I can live with it. So I have been preparing for the appointment: printing out the last 9 months of my “wellness calendar.” Here’s what January looked like: I color in days when I feel great as pink (when “I’m in the pink”) – I only had one of those. Days when I am sick but functioning are orange; when I am functioning about half-way are red; totally out for the count are brown. I had a very red and orange January, luckily no brown days.
So then I printed out the narrative part for the last month, that shows how much I slept, what changes I made to my diet, details of my migraines and sinus infections. I printed my checklists for caring for myself when I have a sinus infection or migraine, so the doctor can review them. I wrote out my questions. Here’s what my desk looks like right now. The yellow book in the pile is Breaking the Headache Cycle by Ian Livingstone, M.D. I don’t think messy desks are identified in there as a migraine trigger, but it still seems ironic!
I got up at 6:10 to get the kids’ breakfast and get the younger one off on the bus (the older gets herself off on the bus – let’s be clear about that). I dealt with dishes and then went back to sleep for 45 minutes since I’d had only 6 1/2 hours of sleep which is a pretty reliable migraine trigger for me. But when I got up again there was only time to prepare for the doctor and write to you here. So I have not done my meditation/relaxation practice for the day or gotten my exercise, both of which are important to keep myself healthy and resistant to migraine triggers. I’m going to have to fit them in this afternoon, when I will also be worrying about getting all my work done for the day. Stress alert!
I so want to be perfect at my treatment plan and know perfectly (!) well I’ve never been perfect at much of anything. It reminds me of one of those annoying parabolas (or was it a hyperbola?) from Trigonometry – approaching zero but never reaching it. The ridiculous emotional see-saw of trying to do it all but without stressing about it. Time for the Serenity Prayer again. Time for the rainbow picture again – the perfect rainbow over the field outside my window – reminding me of the return of hope. What would we do without it?
– Megan Oltman
Hurrying up without Being in a Hurry!
Tags: healthy living, Ian Livingstone MD, Migraine management, migraine treatment plan, relaxation, wellness calendar
Posted in Managing, Tips & Techniques | Comments (2)
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