Celiac.com 01/11/2010 - When I first went on a gluten free diet, my migraines disappeared completely.For
five wonderful years, I only felt the twinges of a migraine (or maybe
just a blessedly “normal” headache) during those few times when I
inadvertently consumed gluten.Another thing also happened once I went on a gluten free diet – I got pregnant.
But, five years
later, I learned that there could be more than one trigger for my
migraines and unfortunately, gluten was only one of them.After two cycles of pregnancy and nursing, my hormones eventually normalized into a regular cycle.Now, that, in and of itself, amazed me, that for the first time in my life my body had learned to have a 4-week textbook cycle.But, along with those cycles came the worst migraines I had ever experienced in my life.I realized, sadly, that gluten wasn’t my only migraine trigger.I could avoid gluten, but I couldn’t avoid my cycle.The
irony of it all struck hard– the gluten free diet had made me healthy
enough to have a regular cycle – a regular cycle attached with horrific
migraines.Once again, I was going from doctor to doctor,
but this time (unlike the years until my celiac diagnosis), I received
a fast diagnosis – menstrual migraine.The neurologist
who diagnosed me said that they were probably the worst type of
migraine out there – very resistant to medication, fierce in their
strength, and often lasting for days.Well, he hasn’t been wrong.
Four years of migraines later, I honestly believe I may have tried every migraine treatment known to woman!I have been searching for a solution in the hope that if I could cure mine, anybody’s could be cured.However,
along the way, many of the things I have tried that have temporarily
worked, have worked for others too, with more lasting results.Hence this article – why not share what I’ve learned in the hope that others can be helped?Maybe, too, in this process, someone out there will know of a treatment that I have not yet tried.
Before I go on, I do
want to say that staying on the gluten-free diet is the only option to
having a good life at all – even though it allows the cycles that bring
the migraines.Before going gluten-free, I was sick all the time with migraines.Now I am much healthier, but do get terrible cyclical migraines.I obviously choose the latter.
This article focuses on migraine prevention.I
do have in my cabinet some very expensive, strong prescription triptans
(Amerge works the best for me) and these are a necessity…simply because
I do not want to land up in my local emergency room with a migraine
that feels like it’s killing me.I think of the prescriptions as my rescue doses, for those times when all the prevention and care in the world fails.
I have tried many,
many preventative treatments – supplements, herbs, Chinese medicine,
bioidentical hormone pills, natural hormone creams, allergy treatments,
massage, chiropractic, and even acupuncture.People swear
by massage and acupuncture, I tried it some, but did not perceive
enough of a benefit to continue – the expense alone was giving me a
migraine.
To date, nothing has taken away my migraines, but the following items have definitely helped.And, the good news is that every item listed is affordable and completely doable!
- Wake
up at the same time every day. My neurologist has a beautiful
explanation as to why this can prevent a migraine, and it surprisingly
has nothing to do with low blood sugar! I cannot remember his eloquent
explanation. But, many migraine sufferers will find they get a
migraine on their day off – the “Saturday Migraine”. Usually, it’s
from sleeping in and messing up the sensitive sleep/wake cycle. My
alarm has one setting – for week days as well as weekends. If I’m
tired later in the day from getting up early after a late night (which
would usually happen on a weekend), I do my best to take a nap, but I
rarely sleep in.
- B complex. Every migraine guide you read anywhere, always mentions the
B vitamins. As I have already posted, and others have commented,
celiacs have low absorption of the B vitamins since often the damaged
portion of the small intestine is where absorption of B’s should
occur. This can be overcome by taking large doses of B’s. I finally
found a B-complex I can tolerate, and that’s Solgar B50. They have a
stronger dose, Solgar B100, but the B50 works for me. B2 is often
singled out for migraine sufferers, and Solgar makes an isolated B2,
but this doesn’t work well for me. It may for you, and at under $10,
it’s certainly worth a try – in fact, I wish I could give you some of
my almost-full bottle to try!
- Magnesium. I’ve taken magnesium
all along, but recently, from a commercial on the celiac website in the
migraine section, I read about Dermamag. (My husband joked with me
that purchasing a supplement from an online Ad, was akin to finding a
date on the internet, but it does look like this has been a good
thing!) The premise behind Dermamag, is that people with migraines are
not absorbing enough magnesium through their digestive systems (sounds
like a celiac to me), and that their “patented” formula is the first of
its kind to deliver it through the skin. Well, $29 and a few days
later, my first bottle arrived, and I must say, I’ve been quite
pleased. It does sting my skin a bit, so I apply it to wet skin, but
it has definitely stopped a few days from turning into migraine days
these past few weeks. I’m hoping that after a few months of use, the
overall benefit will increase. It might work just as well to soak in a
bath of Epsom salts every night, and it would certainly be cheaper, but
you know, that isn’t a “patented” way to increase your magnesium
levels!!!
- Lemon Juice. About three years ago I read a little
side article in an educators magazine, of all places, that women in
their mid-thirties often start experiencing terrible cyclical
headaches. The article blamed this on our western acidic diets and
went on to say that one of the best ways to counteract an acidic diet
is to squeeze lemon in your water. Now, that made about as much sense
to me as nothing – since lemons are acidic themselves, but lemons are
cheap – much cheaper than the dozens of supplements I have tried over
the years. I have since been told that although they are acidic, their
net effect in the body is basic (?!!) but illogical logic aside, I
started squeezing lemons into my water that same day and for THREE
MONTHS I did not have one migraine. Of course, you have to be careful
not to overdo it – too much acid cannot be good for a sensitive
stomach. Currently, I consume at least one lemon every day – most
people go to the store when they run out of milk, I go when I run out
of lemons. I honestly think that at this point in my migraine journey,
without “lemon-water” I would have a migraine every day. Vitamin D. I actually break open my vitamin D capsule and rub it on my
skin every other day. I know the latest articles are pushing 4000 IU’s
of vitamin D a day and higher, but if I take that much (orally or
transdermally) I get welts on my skin. I showed the welts to a health
care practitioner once and he immediately said they were from excess
vitamin D. I reduced my dose and find that 2000IU every other day
seems to be optimum for me.
- Evening Primrose Oil (EPO) from
Hemp Oil. I think, I hope, I pray, that this oil is turning into my
own personal magic bullet. A few months ago I purchased some Manitoba
Harvest Hemp Oil on the advice of a friend and went 5 weeks without a
migraine. I had previously tried a great brand of EPO in the capsule
form, but honestly couldn’t afford to take it in the doses I required.
The Hemp Oil, however, brings you the EPO in a nature-made n-3:n-6:n-9
fatty acid ratio. When I ran out of the Manitoba harvest, I couldn’t
find it locally, so I bought a different brand and my migraines
returned. Frustrated, I gave up on it, until just two weeks ago, when
someone I had suggested try it raved on and on how it was helping them
with PMS. I finally found my original brand, and have been back on it
for 10 days. The difference so far has been amazing, I don’t even feel
like I could get a migraine at all! Obviously, time will tell, but for
now I’ll continue to be hopeful. I actually take Nordic Arctic Fish
Oil, too, so I mix a little of each and swallow the whole nasty mess.
I have friends who mix it in juice or incorporate it in their food, but
I don’t want to ruin the food I’m eating, so I just take it straight
and get it over with. A word of caution – EPO has been known to cause
uterine contractions, so do not take it if you are pregnant!
- Finally, and I will not belabor this point since I have have mentioned
it in another article, I do take Solgar’s prenatal multivitamin simply
because it’s the only multi that I can tolerate. And, I only take half
a dose.
- Calcium, magnesium, vitamin D from Solaray.
That’s
my personal regime. I have come up with it by research, reading,
severe trial and error, and much wasting of money. Hopefully one of
those items can help you in your quest to become migraine free. As
always, I would never try more than one new thing at a time, our bodies
are too sensitive and there needs to be time for us to gauge our own
reactions.
Good luck, God bless, and I would love to hear of any
of your own personal successes against migraines. Maybe, between all
of us, we can beat these things, and instead of counting the years
until menopause, we can enjoy the intervening years gluten AND migraine
free!!!