Science Are migraines getting worse? - Doctors suggests that climate change, which causes more erratic and severe weather conditions, may be a trigger for more intense migraines.

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The prevalence of migraines in the past three decades has remained stable, but they have become more frequent and intense for people who have them, according to neurologists. Jena Ardell / Getty Images

May 16, 2024, 9:30 AM UTC
By Shiv Sudhakar, M.D.

Migraines are increasing in frequency and intensity among Americans: Could climate change be a reason?

Although the number of Americans who have migraines has remained stable for the last 30 years, their impact on people’s daily activities — including missing social events or being less productive at school or work — has become much worse, according to a recent study.

The report, published in early May in the journal Headache, analyzed 11 studies among U.S. adults from 1989 to 2018 on both episodic and chronic migraines. Researchers found the prevalence of migraines in the past three decades has remained stable, but found Migraine Disability Assessment Scale scores, which measure how migraines affect a person’ daily activities, jumped from 22.0% to 42.4% since 2004, the study found.
The “disability” scores reflect how severe a migraine is.

Migraines affect an estimated 39 million adults in the U.S, according to the American Migraine Foundation.

“While the burden initially increased more significantly among women and has since stabilized, the rate of burden in men has continued to escalate,” lead author Dr. Fred Cohen, assistant professor of medicine and neurology at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York, told NBC News.

“Additionally, our research indicates that the average monthly frequency of headaches has risen over the past 20 years.”

Dr. Timothy A. Collins, chief of the headache division in the department of neurology at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina, said migraines are causing people to be less productive at school and work, attend fewer social and leisure activities and perform fewer household chores because the migraines more frequent and more forceful. Collins was not part of the study.

The Mount Sinai researchers note that the observed increase in the frequency and negative impact of migraines on work and home productivity may be due to increased social awareness of migraines and less stigma around the debilitating condition. Another factor could be environmental changes such as climate change. Erratic and severe weather conditions are known triggers for migraines, Cohen said.

“As extreme weather events, like hurricanes, become more frequent and intense, they could be contributing to an increase in migraine attacks and their severity,” he said.

There is some evidence that thunderstorms and barometric pressure can trigger headaches, but it’s unclear if “regular” air pollution — such as bad air from wildfires — is a migraine trigger, Collins added.

These weather changes may trigger a migraine by disrupting the balance of chemicals in the brain, like serotonin, according to the Mayo Clinic. Weather-related triggers include bright sunlight, extreme heat or cold, sun glare and high humidity.

British researchers warned Wednesday that extreme weather and heat fluctuations may aggravate neurological disorders such as stroke, dementia and schizophrenia. Climate change could also be linked to migraine "severity, duration and frequency," according to the paper, published Wednesday in the Lancet Neurology.

"Worsening climate conditions (including rising temperatures, extreme weather patterns, and escalating pollution) are likely to lead to effects of two types: heightened attack frequency in people who already have migraine, and an upsurge in the overall occurrence of migraine," the scientists from University College London wrote.

Monitoring weather changes, such as with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s HeatRisk tool or your local National Weather Service Forecast Office, can help migraine patients who are sensitive to extreme weather.

Dr. Mark Burish, director of the Will Erwin Headache Research Center at UTHealth Houston, said the research highlights a “concerning trend,” but why migraine disability is worsening is still unclear.

Dr. Rochelle Frank, a clinical professor in neurology at the University of California Davis School of Medicine, said, “There are many factors that could be contributing to these findings.”

More research is needed, she said.

How to avoid migraines​

Treatment for migraines may be based on a patient’s medical history, other medications being prescribed, as well as personal preference, Burish said.
One of the main risk factors for increased severity and frequency of migraine attacks is inadequate treatment, Cohen said.

“As-needed” treatments can range from over-the-counter medicines, such as ibuprofen, to prescription medicines and wearable devices, Burish said.
“For patients who have headaches often or are heavily burdened by their headaches despite their ‘as needed’ treatment, we add a preventive treatment,” Burish said.

This may include over-the-counter supplements, prescription medications, self-administered injections, wearable devices, infusions and provider-performed procedures, he said.

Preventative medication can often decrease the number of days that people get headaches every month by greater than 50%, Collins added.

Not all treatment requires medication. Many people may not realize how everyday conditions — dehydration, sleep deprivation, skipping meals and emotional stress — can trigger symptoms.

Dietary changes such as avoiding caffeinated beverages, chocolate or alcohol that can trigger a migraine, improving sleep hygiene and vitamin/mineral supplements can also have a significant impact on headache health, Cohen said.

Shiv Sudhakar, M.D., is an infectious disease specialist and health contributor to NBC News Health. He works in addiction medicine, so is very passionate about decreasing substance abuse, combating homelessness and improving mental health.

Source (Archive)
 
Going off what @Otterly said, Migraines are mostly emotional or stress induced. Maybe the problem is less the weather and more the fact that compared to past generations, people are more emotionally unstable or being diagnosed as such? Nah, fuck that, climate change.

Have we literally slipped back into medieval witch doctor thinking and blaming everything on the weather? And if so, can I get a PhD if I write papers blaming weather?
 
Clinicians & prescribers should carefully try to differentiate between classic migraine symptoms and "really bad headaches" called migraines colloquially. Migraines have a distinctive symptom pattern (severe nausea, light and noise sensitivity, preceded by a prodrome with a crescendo pattern, relieved somewhat by darkness and sleep, specific environmental triggers, duration <48 hours, almost exclusively females), pathophysiology and treatment options. The problem is that the obfuscation between classic migraines, lack of diagnostic confirmation other than history taking and patients referring to any bad headache as a "migraine" means there's huge potential for expensive and potentially dangerous migraine-specific drugs being overused simply for laziness, lack of better options and "everything looks like a nail".
This defines my migraines to a near perfect T, with an additional caveat that my body would eventually purge if the pain was too high and continuous. I’d find myself in the bathroom for 30 minutes vomiting until I was so tired and sore I’d pass out. After 12 hours of sleep I would wake up relatively okay. They started around the age of 8 and continued on a 2-3x/monthly basis until I was probably 16. The only way to manage it was essentially preemptively taking Zomig (Zomeg?). If I didn’t take it within like 15 minutes of the onset there was an 80% chance I would be getting sick 5 hours later. After about 18 I think I maybe get one or two every couple of months and they can be managed with otc extra strength Tylenol. The neurologist I saw at 8 (who hated her job with a passion) said that I had a chance of that being a possibility due to my age.
If you’ve not read ‘migraine’ by Oliver sacks, do. Like all his books it is absolutely fantastic
A major trigger of migraine is emotion - both good and bad. It’s as powerful a trigger as the known physical ones. Great book, really recommend it
I’ll have to pick it up at some point. Some of the most significant ones happened when I was emotionally overstimulated (school was out, I had a party coming up some graduations)

I don’t know where everyone is getting being fat causing it as well I was always under/average weight and physically active. The migraines prevented me from being more active in sports if anything.
 
I used to think I suffered from migraines until a woman that I worked with mentioned she always seems to get headaches before thunderstorms. Then I also found the same correlation for myself as I'd not made that connection before. So I looked it up and found what I thought were migraines was actually barometric pressure headaches.

That's probably what's going on here, misdiagnosis. The article does very very briefly touch on this but dismisses it.
I used fly gliders and barometric pressure headaches were a problem if I flew while congested from a mild cold or allergies.

Barometric/atmospheric pressure changes with altitude, and when your sinuses are congested the pressure differential between your sinuses and the atmosphere cannot naturally equalize, causing a pretty nasty headache.

I found it to be tolerable while ascending to altitude because the ascent is a gradual climb. But once you're cut loose and doing aerobatic maneuvers where you end up descending very rapidly the headache was sudden and severe. That pressure differential can also give you a hell of an earache as well.
 
lol I'm not reading any of this shit and it's laughable that anybody would even attempt to make this argument. They're trying to obfuscate being a fat unhealthy fuck as a potential cause while also combining pushing pharmaceuticals and climate change into one convenient package! Suck my dick!

Migraines aren't from being fat. Although I wouldn't be surprised if that makes them worse. It makes everything else worse.

I do have migraines. The puking kind. I take Sumatriptan. It works. If you have a lot of migraines they usually want you to get a scan to rule out brain tumors first. Yeah you probably don't have a tumor. But better safe than sorry. It's probably more to protect the doctor in the event that you have a brain pea that becomes a brain melon and kills you. Then your family can sue.

I’m no migraine expert but I imagine having a bright screen in your face 8+ hrs/day doesn’t help much with that either if you’re predisposed to it. No mention of that in the article unsurprisingly.

That is a valid point. I would imagine too that there are people so addicted to social media and TikTok binging that they can't turn off their phone even when their head is about to explode. A lot of people have no idea how to quietly relax anymore. They are too used to having their iPhone shoved in their face 24/7. You see people crossing the street with their eyes glued to their phone. Put it down. It's ok to not doomscroll for an hour. Facebook and Instagram will survive without you.
 
There are three easy solutions to prevent migraines.

1.) Get more sleep.
2.) Stop staring at screens all day.
3.) Avoid annoying naggy people.
 
can I get a PhD if I write papers blaming weather?
If you link it to climate change yes! They will thrown grant money at you
my body would eventually purge if the pain was too high and continuous. I’d find myself in the bathroom for 30 minutes vomiting until I was so tired and sore I’d pass out
Migraines are somehow involving of the gut too - abdominal migraine is a thing. Really, read that book, it’s so good.
Mine are triggered by a few physical things but absolutely by emotion, good or bad. The worst ones I’ve ever had in my life have been after I’ve had something really shocking happen to me (like an acute fear response.) usually 24 hours after. It’s almost like a way of knocking you down and purging the fear.

Medieval people definitely experienced migraine. If you look at saint Hildegaard’s drawings of her visions you’ll immediately recognise the abstract shapes as a classical zig zag light show.
 
The report, published in early May in the journal Headache
What kind a fly by night journal is this?
KF MIGRAINE CLIMATE.png
I did a search for the journal and its a 2nd rate journal at best but more likely a 3rd rate shit tier journal. It's not even in the top 50 journals regarding Neuroscience. Into the garbage this article goes.
 
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If you link it to climate change yes! They will thrown grant money at you
They do this with literally everything and it's genuinely damaging. The people approving the grants don't seem to understand what caused climate change, or what it does.

I have genuinely considered applying for it, for small-scale biosynthesis of fertiliser from urea. I don't think they would notice the risk attached.

Medieval people definitely experienced migraine. If you look at saint Hildegaard’s drawings of her visions you’ll immediately recognise the abstract shapes as a classical zig zag light show.
I mentioned this is another thread - migraines are neurovascular. Which seems more likely, chronic stress and experimental medicine forced on the population, or climate change?
 
This kind of shit is going to be looked back at in the same way we do modern flat earth "theories". (i.e. without even shred of basis in facts or logic, and having no excuses)
 
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