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jlebrech | 7 years ago

you could also just avoid your migraine trigger, I have and get around 3 migraines a year max rather than having one every month or 2 or 3 a week as a teen.

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gruseom|7 years ago

> you could also just avoid your migraine trigger

Jerry Weinberg, who died yesterday, used to say that every time you hear the j-word ("just") you should replace it with "have trouble", i.e. "you could also have trouble avoiding your migraine trigger". He was talking about software projects, but the rule is general. The j-word usually indicates that difficulty is being glossed over.

happytoexplain|7 years ago

Anecdotally, over the years I've tried identifying my triggers by keeping logs of food, drink, sleep, stress, travel, etc, and correlating the data. After all that, I've identified a few specific foods, but even those were unreliable triggers, and avoiding them didn't cause a significant decrease overall. Medication gave me my life back.

driverdan|7 years ago

You state that as if it's simple and anyone can do it.

What if something common like changes in atmospheric pressure trigger it? What if you have multiple common triggers? What if you don't know all your triggers?

orthecreedence|7 years ago

Just keep a food log, mood log, sleep log, stress log, barometric pressure log, air quality log, oxygen level log, altitude log, brightness log, screen-time log, eye strain log, face-shoulder-neck tension log, spine pain log, head trauma log, and a blood pressure log.

Then you can hook up all the data into a recurrent neural network that finds the patterns in the data and lets you know what combination of conditions will give you migraines.

It's really easy to find all your migraine triggers if you follow these very basic steps.

rrdharan|7 years ago

I was under the impression that identifying the trigger can be quite difficult, to the point where some folks who suffer from Chronic migraines can spend years trying to figure out the combination of factors that act as the trigger?

TallGuyShort|7 years ago

With the variety of triggers that are possible and the possibility of there being multiple triggers with complex interactions, that is much easier said than done for many. After keeping meticulous logs of anything that might be a trigger, I've managed to reduce my migraines to 1 a month from 3-4 per weeks over a period of about 4 years, eventually identifying 7 or 8 causes. Even then, when I do get one, which combination of pain drugs to take is a huge gamble. CBD oil seems to be the only thing that always works, but that's unfeasible for me. So I'm not going to complain about a new drug for it.

tsomctl|7 years ago

Well, most migraine triggers are basically oxidative stress (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/head.12725), and it is impossible to avoid oxidative stress since even simply burning glucose contributes to it.

bryan11|7 years ago

Interesting. Perhaps this explains why people on ketosis with very low sugar report fewer migraines.

heyyyouu|7 years ago

Not all migraines have triggers. This drug in particular is for chronic migraines, and while the definition of chronic is 15 days or more, the people who will qualify for this drug (and who it was really designed for) are the people who have them 24 hours a day, 7 days a week non-stop. So living is their trigger. Nice advice.

ryanianian|7 years ago

Hard to do when sometimes migraine triggers can be changes in the weather.