Migraine sufferers
mandyrene21
Posts: 215 Member
I've been dealing with chronic migraines for months now. I get them weekly for the most part and they last several days on average. It's really interfering with my gym time! I have an appt with a specialist soon (finally, after a 2.5 month wait). I will discuss more with the doctor at that time but for now I'm really frustrated.
Anyone else here manage their migraines and can keep up workouts? I am into lifting and the sporadic nature of being able to get to the gym, while better than nothing, doesn't produce the results I want. Any tips are greatly appreciated!
Anyone else here manage their migraines and can keep up workouts? I am into lifting and the sporadic nature of being able to get to the gym, while better than nothing, doesn't produce the results I want. Any tips are greatly appreciated!
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I'm just starting out and I am a chronic migraine sufferer as well... I spoke to my neurologist actually on Friday and he suggested doing an exercise like yoga and told me not to do more strenuous exercises while I have a migraine. I'm interested to see if anyone has any other suggestions because these headaches are pretty terrible.0
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Luckily my migraines don't start till midday, so I workout in the mornings. I've been taking topamax as a preventative for about 10 years, but it's worn out its welcome. I saw a neurologist last week and I'm getting (fingers crossed) Botox injections next week if they are approved by insurance. Then I will titrate off of the topamax slowly.
Once I have a migraine I can't work out, so I really try to get things done before they hit. If you aren't on a preventative, and you get them often, I would talk to your dr about getting on one. Topamax took me from 4-5 migraines a week to maybe 6 a year for a very long time.0 -
I'm so sorry. I totally get it. I wouldn't wish a migraine on my worst enemy!
I don't work out if I'm suffering from a migraine. I don't really FUNCTION when I'm suffering from a migraine. It put a serious damper on my second half-marathon training, because I had so many headache days and I was missing training runs, and then even on my "good" days, I wouldn't be at my best, because after a migraine that left me sidelined for a few days, I'd have a migraine hangover. And medicating a migraine doesn't help me with exercise - Imitrex works to knock out the headache, but it leaves me fuzzy and kind of weak-feeling.
Do you have any idea what triggers them? Do you think dieting or exercise is making them worse? I have a bunch of triggers, but low blood sugar is one of them, so if I weren't eating enough, you could bet I'd pay for it. Some kinds of exercise can be a problem for me, too - I have a neck muscle prone to spasm, and if I strain that muscle, it'll cause a tension headache that ultimately triggers a migraine. So form is EXTREMELY important when lifting.
If you're dealing with migraines on a weekly basis, you'll probably talk with your doctor about some sort of management. There are medications you can take on a daily basis that may help prevent your pain.
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Topamax is still working well for me. Hoping I don't hit that 10 year fade, but I am only about 2 years into it and it has helped a ton. I was at 2-3 a week and I have only had a couple in the last year.. I don't miss them a bit. I will say I think losing weight and stress management I think has helped a lot, but it is so much easier doing those two things without as many migraines.
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I get them often - in fact I have one right now. I'm fine with cardio while I have one - it makes it go away somewhat until I'm done exercising (it comes back). However, I highly doubt I'd be able to lift while I'm having one. Maybe just do cardio on migraine days? Goodluck! I hear good things about Topamax.0
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Hi, ladies.
I've been planning my life around migraines since my teens. If you're getting them weekly, you should really investigate a daily preventative. Unfortunately, none of them are without side effects. I've been on Topamax and am now on Depakote. Both are unpleasant, but stop the headaches (almost) entirely. I've read great things about using Botox for chronic migraine (no headaches, very few side effects) but insurance doesn't cover it.
In the short term, I would see if you can eliminate any foods that could be triggers from your diet. Most common are red wine, chocolate, aged cheeses, and cured meats. Of course, if your migraines are stress related then you can work on relaxation techniques. And if they're hormonal then you'd have to look into ways to balance those.
As far as workouts go, I think you need to solve the headaches first. Activity always makes mine drastically worse. On the (now rare) occasion that one takes hold, I'm bed ridden.
Good luck at your appointment!0 -
Let's see. I have been a constant migraine sufferer. Topamax and mess like it made me a duranged lunatic so until I found a wonderful neurologist I was stuck.
About 18 months ago I started a round of Botox injection while at the same time totally cleaning up my diet. During the next 12 months my migraines decreased. I stopped getting the injections after a year and have had very few since.
My diet is still pretty clean. We eat out seldomly so I control most of my food intake. I stay away from most preservatives, the "ites" (nitrites, sulfites), and rearly drink, never wine.
As far as working out this is when I discovered and fell in love with yoga. Any lifting was a no go as the straining would be a no go on the head and cardio would get my heart rate up to much. It felt like my head was going to explode.
Goodluck.0 -
I had migraines and daily headaches for 13 years. On June 1st I cut way back on dairy, grains and processed food. I haven't had one headache since. I still eat a bit of those things a week (but no where close to where I was). It is amazing to be headache free! I go back to my neurologist in September and am hoping to tell them what I did to manage them myself.
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Hi, ladies.
I've been planning my life around migraines since my teens. If you're getting them weekly, you should really investigate a daily preventative. Unfortunately, none of them are without side effects. I've been on Topamax and am now on Depakote. Both are unpleasant, but stop the headaches (almost) entirely. I've read great things about using Botox for chronic migraine (no headaches, very few side effects) but insurance doesn't cover it.
In the short term, I would see if you can eliminate any foods that could be triggers from your diet. Most common are red wine, chocolate, aged cheeses, and cured meats. Of course, if your migraines are stress related then you can work on relaxation techniques. And if they're hormonal then you'd have to look into ways to balance those.
As far as workouts go, I think you need to solve the headaches first. Activity always makes mine drastically worse. On the (now rare) occasion that one takes hold, I'm bed ridden.
Good luck at your appointment!
Depakote made me extremely sick - I was losing chunks of hair and had bald spots. It never helped me with my migraines either. Also, I've had the botox treatments too. They never did a thing for me. Adjusting my diet had helped somewhat, though. I used to get migraines multiple times a week -- now maybe once or twice a month.0 -
girl_inflames wrote: »Depakote made me extremely sick
Yikes. I definitely have side effects, but nothing like that. Topamax left me unable to feel my feet, hands, and face. It also made it difficult for me to recall words when speaking. I actually went back to the neurologist because I thought something was seriously wrong and he said, "No, that's the Topamax."
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Took me 25 years of daily head aches and once a week migraines to figure out that aspartame was causing it all. Since cutting that out they are very very few and far between now. If I have even half a can of diet pop the next morning I have a migrain. I would defiantly look into food triggers. Birth control pills was another one, they gave migraines 3-4 times a week so I can't take them. Good luck to you, I understand how awful it is.0
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I get very intense but infrequent migraines, if I get one it comes while I am sleeping. Can't really exercise during a bad one because I puke and cannot eat or drink anything, they are very well controlled with injectable sumatriptan (95% of the time will work)
I hope the doctor can find you something that works. My youngest daughter gets these and i hate when they just say "watch for triggers" because if my trigger is sleeping during my period, what the heck am I supposed to do about that? If her trigger is getting hungry, well, we can't avoid that 100% of the time either. Thunderstorms? Again, WTF are we supposed to do about that? I feel like they blame the patient, not on purpose, they want to make you feel more in control but it backfires and makes me so mad.
Anyway - end of rant.
Daily gentle exercise and a consistent schedule may actually help you control the headaches. If lifting is causing them, try taking ibuprofen directly afterward or eating 15 dry cherries, something to circumvent the body's response. Keep your head cool and your feet warm. Usually migraines come when we relax after a stress (not during stress), that's why they often come on during sleep. Evil things.
Like browneyes15, mine were MUCH more frequent and intense on bc pills. Aspartame is not a trigger for me though.
As I get older (approaching 50) they have gotten farther apart, and also getting the Mirena IUD helped, fewer periods = fewer migraines.0 -
I'm a migraine sufferer as well. It's so hard to stay focused on your routine when a migraine decides to pop up. I've been through all the drug treatments, but the things that I've found that work best for me are:
1. Don't push yourself. If you can't keep to your exercise because of a migraine, don't force yourself and potentially make it worse.
2. Learn your triggers. Keep a journal, because avoiding your triggers is often much easier than just trying to deal with the migraines.
3. Consider the daith piercing! I had mine done and while it isn't a miracle cure, it DOES help the frequency and severity of migraines in my experience. YMMV, but if you don't mind a piercing, it's worth a shot.0 -
I'm lucky I only get a handful of migraines a year but I still haven't figured out what my triggers are.
I recently bought this stuff on Amazon called Kwan Loong oil (kind of like tiger balm) to use on my sore muscles after working out. I liked it so much I went to leave a review on Amazon and then in reading others reviews saw that a lot of people use it for their migraines. I put some on my temple during my last two migraines and it definitely helped. It's super cheap so it may be worth a shot.0 -
I'm chronic and have been since I was a teenager. My silver bullet has been a daily LA beta blocker (Propranolol) + migranal PRN as an abortive, and daily birth control (I skip placebo). I've been on all of the triptans, which I found worked well but left me lethargic. I also echo the sentiment above about Topamax, that stuff turned me into a full blown psycho- sleeping 18 hours a day and crying the other 6.
I've started working out consistently over the last 6 months and I found that, along with all the drugs, helped me control them a little better, especially during the hormonal times. I've also discovered that sugar apparently is a trigger of mine, so I walked that back as well.
A note on the migranal if you discuss it with your doctor- this drug is not for the faint of heart. It has its history as an abortion drug derived from a toxic fungus that grows naturally on rye. In fact, it is widely believed by some historians that the hallucinations caused by overdosing on rye tainted with the fungus led to the salem witch trials. It is a schedule X drug, cannot be taken during pregnancy for any reason due to known side effects that are fatal to the fetus, and has a host of interactions. It was the last abortive I tried after exhausting all of the other options, but it works. Two doses can take me from the point where i can't feel the left side of my body (why, of all the symptoms, do i get that one?!), to feeling relatively normal in 30 min.
Migraines appear to be a derivative of seizure disorder (http://news.psu.edu/story/332549/2014/10/30/research/link-seen-between-seizures-and-migraines-brain). Don't feel bad if the home remedies don't work for you. No one would try a homeopathic cure for a seizure.0 -
Yes, I use medical cannabis. I found a specific strain the eases pain, gives no "munchies" or dry mouth and does not make me drowsy if I take the appropriate dose.
It helps with the pain just enough so I can get a really solid workout in on the days I am experiencing migraine which for me is usually 3 days each month on average.0 -
Anyone who can do anything other than lie in a black room trying - failing to not be sick and praying for sleep whilst having what I consider a migraine deserves a *kitten* medal in my opinion! However when I have what I call the migraine hangover the day after I find stretching like yoga is nice.0
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Thank you everyone for your kind of! You all have given a lot of great advice and I appreciate it!
I do not currently know my triggers, so far nothing stands out beyond my cycle (I use migraine buddy). But since I get them weekly now I'm not sure it is my only trigger. I was switched to the mini pill earlier this year and that didn't help.
As of now, I haven't been to the gym in probably about 2 months. The only exercise I've attempted is walking on non headache days. It's so frustrating when I have big goals but feel stuck!
I am not dieting right now, my actual plan is recomp so I'm supposed to be eating at maintenance and lifting...but just eating at maintenance right now obviously! I'm not even attempting lower calorie at the moment but if I do I'd probably only drop 100-200 calories per day.
Thank you all again! I will have to try yoga, that sounds like my best option right now. My appt is Monday so hopefully I get some relief! Good luck to all of you dealing with them too, they are miserable!0 -
I started following the diet in "Eat to Live" because it claims to help with migraines for 90-95% of people. It's primarily vegetables, fruits, beans, nuts and seeds, although for migraine sufferers he initially restricts it even more - only vegetables and fruits and some oatmeal for the first 2 weeks (obviously not sustainable but the goal I think is to get all the processed junk cleared out of your body). I've only been going for 6 days, but it seems promising. I had a bad headache on day 2 and none since.
My headaches responds well to Imitrex but I get them frequently and don't want to be taking it so often. Also it's been a problem for over 20 years, so I am willing to give this a try for a few weeks to see if it can help. The diet is good for weight loss also, though if you've been doing a high protein diet this is very different. It is low in refined carbs but you get most of your protein by eating a large volume of veggies (2 pounds/.9 kg a day) and beans.
I have numerous headache triggers - alcohol, chocolate, various fermented and aged things (fish sauce, soy sauce, parmesan cheese), beef stew(?!), chemicals - but could not identify them all. Topamax helped me some if I religiously avoid caffeine and fortunately I don't have side effects. This diet simply removes everything processed and aged and gives you fresh plants as the basis of your diet.0 -
I only seem to get them the day after Iv drank a lot. So alcohol induced and last a day or 2..so I can avoid mine..
Anything trigger yours?0 -
@Shells918 @CeliaSea Topamax helps with weight loss!0
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Chocolate causes migraines for me. (It's actually a common trigger) went from weekly to about one a year.
Other triggers are stress, bright sun, and low blood sugar-if all three happen I might get a migraine.0 -
I use a daily preventative and then Imitrex as needed. It's changed my life. I hope you find a solution!1
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I know this isn't the most popular opinion, but I suffered from migraines at least weekly in high school, and the last year probably once a month. I have cut out a lot more caffeine than usual, but what really eliminated them was eating paleo. I have done a few whole30's and I'm not currently eating paleo because it's takes a buttload of time and preparation. I have had one migraine since, about two months so not bad. My recommendation is to do a whole30 or an autoimmune protocol/other elimination diet, and in the reintroduction phase you might be able to see if some food group your eating might be contributing to or causing migraines. You might find your migraines at least lessen in severity.0
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I used to be in a beta blocker for migraines. But when I lost weight I didn't have them anymore. Stress related.
It was then that I found the beta blocker all inhibited my workout. Heat rate couldn't get about 120 and when it did get close to that I got dizzy. Body needing more O2 but not getting it die to the blocker limiting my max HR. Doc took me off it. It was great to see 135's and 140 in spin class after that.0 -
I suffer from migraines triggered by perfumy smells, I have been prescribed Sumatriptan by the doctor which is the only thing that will shift it.1
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iManifestGoals wrote: »@Shells918 @CeliaSea Topamax helps with weight loss!
Topamax did help me lose weight in the beginning, but that was in 2006, and it's not helping my migraines anymore.
I did just get Botox last week (for migraines, from my neurologist) and have still gotten 3 migraines this week.0 -
browneyes1520 wrote: »Took me 25 years of daily head aches and once a week migraines to figure out that aspartame was causing it all. Since cutting that out they are very very few and far between now. If I have even half a can of diet pop the next morning I have a migrain. I would defiantly look into food triggers. Birth control pills was another one, they gave migraines 3-4 times a week so I can't take them. Good luck to you, I understand how awful it is.
Aspartame and saccharine for me....also hormones...the only time they eased was when I was on continual pill. ....shame I had to come off them0
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