massage and bodywork professionals
a community of practitioners
Tags:
Views: 303
I suffered from migraines from around age 16 and only recently have I stopped having them - usually twice a year or maybe more, depending on the season. Doctors do not know the etymology of a migraine headache. I had doctors call my headaches everything from "migraine syndrome" to "call for attention".
I will say this. The term is used lightly, but take my word for it, a what I call "true" migraine headache is extremely painful when it is in the acute stages. If you have a migraine headache, you cannot eat, you cannot have lights on, you are curled up in a fetal position, under the covers, behind a closed door, and you don't want anyone to talk to you, let alone touch you or massage you. There is usually projectile vomiting, crying, and complete immobility presented with migraine headaches. They can go on for days, and the intensity can vary enough for a migraine patient to walk around, but they are by no means able to work, or function normally. I would go so far as to say that morphine would be indicated as a fair means to treatment for the pain. Been there.
Over the years, I've tried any number of homeopathic remedies as well as pharmaceuticals. I have had allergy testing, CT scans, MRI, Spinal tap and myelogram, and just about every other test in between. Still, the exact cause of a migraine is just not known at this time. I've leaned toward hormonal imbalances and airborne and/or food sensitivities for a long time, but I still don't think these are exacting enough.
I recently read about women having a bit more connective tissue in the brain lobes, with a point towards the way women think and resolve problems as opposed to the way men do the same. Men approach problems with spatial right brain, solution oriented thinking, whereas women talk and work problems out from both right and left lobes. I often wonder if there is some correlation between the statistics of migraine sufferers showing higher numbers of women than men, and more connective tissue in the skull. This might seem like a reach, but I've been looking for answers for about 40 years.
I would caution against using massage on a person with true migraines, simply because the etymology is not know at this time. When someone tells me they have migraine headaches, I'm careful to question them tenderly so as not to offend them because they THINK they have migraines and maybe what they have is simply a headache from their hairstyle, from dehydration, from allergens, caffiene, etc., etc., etc. If someone does have true migraine headaches, they can still receive massage, just maybe not during the time they are experiencing a migraine. Just the right amount of pressure could send them into a raging vomit fest, or even cause them to lose consciousness.
If they've been diagnosed by a doctor who says they have "migraine syndrome" and they are taking medication to control the symptoms, I will use cold therapies, scalp massages (because the scalp DOES get very sore from migraines), and gentle but meaningful effleurage to the neck and shoulder areas. I also try to determine if they have TMJ syndrome, eye problems, ear, nose, and throat problems or pulmonary/cardiovascular problems.
Hope this is helpful. Migraines suck in the worst way.
;^)
Debo
© 2024 Created by ABMP. Powered by