Nov 10

If you suffer from headaches, there are simple, gentle exercises can provide relief.

For the 10% of the citizenry that suffers headaches and migraines, the anticipation of addition day off assignment or abroad from ancestors activities is article to be abhorred as abundant as humanly possible. When a cephalalgia strikes, abounding sufferers tend to ability for the packet of painkillers or over-the-counter medication. These can advice but there is the abiding crisis of ancillary effects.

A appointment to one’s doctor for a abounding analysis is binding if you are accepting added than the casual bender of arch affliction or are experiencing headaches that are worse than the accustomed ones that can be convalescent by a acceptable lie down.

Medical doctors can now appoint an arrangement of cephalalgia medicines, both preventatives and those that can be acclimated to stop anniversary alone attack. abounding doctors now accommodate a cardinal of non-drug treatments in their arsenal of methods to stop, abate or ascendancy headaches. An accomplished added action that you can use apart to advice abate headaches or migraines is to accomplish a alternation of affable contest to calm the accent and about-face the beef access that you are experiencing.

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Sep 19

Good news to those who suffer from chronic headaches, acupuncture can provide relief to those who suffer from them.

Acupuncture may bring some added pain relief to people with chronic headaches, a new study suggests.

The study, the largest to date on using acupuncture to ease headaches, adds to a conflicting body of evidence: Some research has suggested that adding acupuncture to standard headache medication brings patients additional pain relief; other studies, however, have found that “sham” acupuncture — using blunted needles that do not pierce the skin — is as effective as the real thing.

Those latter studies call into question the true effectiveness of acupuncture.

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Aug 25

Acupuncture can greatly reduce chronic headaches and it works better than asprin in providing relief.

Acupuncture works better than drugs like aspirin to reduce the severity and frequency of chronic headaches, U.S. researchers reported on Monday.

A review of studies involving nearly 4,000 patients with migraine, tension headache and other forms of chronic headache showed that that 62 percent of the acupuncture patients reported headache relief compared to 45 percent of people taking medications, the team at Duke University found.

“Acupuncture is becoming a favorable option for a variety of purposes, ranging from enhancing fertility to decreasing post-operative pain, because people experience significantly fewer side effects and it can be less expensive than other options,” Dr. Tong Joo Gan, who led the study, said in a statement.

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May 07

Many of us are leaving with chronic headaches, or migraines and relief sometimes does not come fast enough. A recent research has shown that acupuncture to be an effective treatment for it.

Acupuncture may bring some added pain relief to people with chronic headaches, a new study suggests.

The study, the largest to date on using acupuncture to ease headaches, adds to a conflicting body of evidence: Some research has suggested that adding acupuncture to standard headache medication brings patients additional pain relief; other studies, however, have found that “sham” acupuncture — using blunted needles that do not pierce the skin — is as effective as the real thing.

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Jan 08

Acupuncture is one of the four treatments that have been found to be effective in treating headaches.

The feeling is familiar: a band cinching your skull, a dull ache in the back of your neck. It’s a tension headache, and it’s by far the most common type—about 90 percent of women and 70 percent of men will experience one during their lifetime. Neurologists don’t completely understand the reason your head hurts, but they do know that many headaches are linked to stress, contraction of the neck muscles, poor sleep, and, in women, monthly hormonal fluctuations. Which is why most headache experts recommend relaxation techniques, exercise, limiting caffeine and alcohol (which interfere with sleep), and, for women, discussing birth control pills with a gynecologist. Here, four approaches to treating headaches.

Neurology
The first thing a neurologist would do is order a CT scan or MRI to rule out potentially serious causes such as a tumor, aneurysm, or stroke, says Marc Sharfman, MD, director of the Headache and Neurological Treatment Institute in Longwood, Florida. If those are ruled out, then, besides the nondrug treatments above, Sharfman might suggest biofeedback: He connects patients to devices that monitor muscle tension, blood pressure, and heart rate, then has them practice breathing patterns to identify what helps them relax. Drugs—over-the-counter and prescription—are part of a neurologist’s arsenal, but Sharfman notes that patients do best by combining nondrug approaches with minimal medication use.

Acupuncture
A primary goal for an acupuncturist is to wean the patient off prescription and over-the-counter painkillers that can trigger rebound headaches (people who regularly take these medications can suffer a headache as soon as the pills wear off), says Daniel Hsu, a practitioner of traditional Chinese medicine and founder of New York AcuHealth, an acupuncture clinic. Acupuncture can help patients relax as well as transition off medications; what’s more, a recent review of research found that the technique could halve the number of days a month a person experiences head pain.

Homeopathy
Along with prescribing a remedy for the headache, a homeopath will typically offer advice on improving diet or, say, reducing exposure to chemicals in the environment, says Dana Ullman, who runs Homeopathic Educational Services in Berkeley. Because homeopaths believe the body’s response to an illness is the correct one, they give heavily diluted substances—often the herbs nux vomica and belladonna for headaches—that are supposed to mimic the patient’s symptoms, thereby helping the body defend and heal itself. (Though these two herbs are poisonous, the doses contain no toxins.) Often, the patient can begin to feel much better after one treatment, Ullman says.

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