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34 reviews for:
The Migraine Brain: Your Breakthrough Guide to Fewer Headaches, Better Health
Elaine McArdle, Carolyn Bernstein
34 reviews for:
The Migraine Brain: Your Breakthrough Guide to Fewer Headaches, Better Health
Elaine McArdle, Carolyn Bernstein
I took notes while reading this. New studies and research have led to the view of migraines as a complex neurological disease of the central nervous system. Far from just a headache, the symptoms can include vomiting, scalp tingling, visual distortions, inability to speak, cold hands and feet, and problems in cognitive processing similar to a stroke, as well as a massive headache often centered behind one eye. All of these are things I experience, yay!
What happens when a migraine occurs is that your nervous system has an out-of-control reaction, which triggers a wave of energy that flows across your cortex and causes your neurons to fire rapidly back and forth from positive to negative charge. (This would be when I see sparkly stuff in the corners of my vision.) This causes the main problem: SPREADING CORTICAL DEPRESSION. You don't want this. It involves a sudden catastrophic loss of serotonin and dopamine, leading to other badness: dilation of blood vessels and inflammation of nerves as they release neuropeptides, particularly the trigeminal nerves that run up the face and behind each eye socket. It's awful.
Triggers can be a lot of different things, and the author is careful to emphasize that they depend on the individual. She discourages the reader from blindly following rules that claim all people with migraine (or migraineurs) need to avoid certain foods or whatnot. For example, coffee can be a trigger for one person but helpful in migraine prevention for someone else. She advocates making a big list of your triggers, based on observation. IKEA is a trigger for me. Not getting enough sleep. Feeling too happy, especially following a stressful period. Bright lights (I am a freak about avoiding them lately.)
I didn't read the entire book, but the sections I checked out were informative and authoritative and easy to follow. Bernstein lays out for the reader the current medical understanding of migraines and how they happen. Other chapters offer clear advice for prevention and treatment plans - including the guidance to write down a clear plan for what steps you will take when you feel yourself getting a migraine in any situation - work, in the car, etc. Very helpful. She talks about the different medicines and their benefits, as well as other treatment plans involving yoga, meditation, and biofeedback.
After years of reading differing advice online and in magazines, this book afforded me an unexpectedly deep sense of relief. I think it mostly came from validation, from knowing that what I have is pretty common although its symptoms are freaky. It made me feel more of a sense of control than I had before - just from small ideas, like that cold hands might be a trigger as well as a warning of a migraine, and I can control that by not letting my hands get cold.
What happens when a migraine occurs is that your nervous system has an out-of-control reaction, which triggers a wave of energy that flows across your cortex and causes your neurons to fire rapidly back and forth from positive to negative charge. (This would be when I see sparkly stuff in the corners of my vision.) This causes the main problem: SPREADING CORTICAL DEPRESSION. You don't want this. It involves a sudden catastrophic loss of serotonin and dopamine, leading to other badness: dilation of blood vessels and inflammation of nerves as they release neuropeptides, particularly the trigeminal nerves that run up the face and behind each eye socket. It's awful.
Triggers can be a lot of different things, and the author is careful to emphasize that they depend on the individual. She discourages the reader from blindly following rules that claim all people with migraine (or migraineurs) need to avoid certain foods or whatnot. For example, coffee can be a trigger for one person but helpful in migraine prevention for someone else. She advocates making a big list of your triggers, based on observation. IKEA is a trigger for me. Not getting enough sleep. Feeling too happy, especially following a stressful period. Bright lights (I am a freak about avoiding them lately.)
I didn't read the entire book, but the sections I checked out were informative and authoritative and easy to follow. Bernstein lays out for the reader the current medical understanding of migraines and how they happen. Other chapters offer clear advice for prevention and treatment plans - including the guidance to write down a clear plan for what steps you will take when you feel yourself getting a migraine in any situation - work, in the car, etc. Very helpful. She talks about the different medicines and their benefits, as well as other treatment plans involving yoga, meditation, and biofeedback.
After years of reading differing advice online and in magazines, this book afforded me an unexpectedly deep sense of relief. I think it mostly came from validation, from knowing that what I have is pretty common although its symptoms are freaky. It made me feel more of a sense of control than I had before - just from small ideas, like that cold hands might be a trigger as well as a warning of a migraine, and I can control that by not letting my hands get cold.
"The biggest myth is that migraine is a type of headache. This is wrong. Migraine is a complex neurological disease that affects your central nervous system" (Bernstein 15).
I'm glad I grabbed Bernstein's book on migraines this time around. I've read others -- books that have advised me to try acupuncture or take magnesium, books that have suggested that I cut out bread products or get a massage every week. I have tried all I could afford of this advice. Some of it worked for a while. Some didn't. Bernstein's advice is different: more flexible, more applicable, encompassing more of the research on migraine while also empathizing with what it feels like to be in the middle of the pain.
From Bernstein, I learned that I don't need to find some puritanical way to blame myself for my migraines because there's a biological reason for them. Migraine is caused by abnormal brain chemistry (Bernstein 15). Good to know, right? And Bernstein doesn't leave us at abnormal and call it a day. She explains the chemistry, which I'm thankful for: "The latest research points to 'cortical spreading depression' as the physical reaction that begins a migraine attack . . . a dramatic wave of electrical 'excitation' that spreads across the surface of the brain, also called the cerebral cortex, when something antagonizes or upsets it" (Bernstein 41). Cortical Spreading Depression (CSD). It has an acronym and everything. I feel better about it already.
If I weren't using the same Goodreads rating scale I used earlier this year to measure Don Quixote, I would add more stars here, because Bernstein is a good teacher. She's kind. She's calming, and she has information that can help migraine sufferers get some kind of plan together to handle the pain. She speaks with equal enthusiasm to those who want to avoid taking medication and those ready to take anything necessary to stop a migraine. There are good reasons for both kinds of decisions, she assures. So yes, I recommend this book. It's a good one.
"There is probably no field in medicine so strewn with the debris of misdiagnosis and mistreatment, and of well-intentioned but wholly mistaken medical an surgical interventions." -Oliver Sacks, Migraine
I'm glad I grabbed Bernstein's book on migraines this time around. I've read others -- books that have advised me to try acupuncture or take magnesium, books that have suggested that I cut out bread products or get a massage every week. I have tried all I could afford of this advice. Some of it worked for a while. Some didn't. Bernstein's advice is different: more flexible, more applicable, encompassing more of the research on migraine while also empathizing with what it feels like to be in the middle of the pain.
From Bernstein, I learned that I don't need to find some puritanical way to blame myself for my migraines because there's a biological reason for them. Migraine is caused by abnormal brain chemistry (Bernstein 15). Good to know, right? And Bernstein doesn't leave us at abnormal and call it a day. She explains the chemistry, which I'm thankful for: "The latest research points to 'cortical spreading depression' as the physical reaction that begins a migraine attack . . . a dramatic wave of electrical 'excitation' that spreads across the surface of the brain, also called the cerebral cortex, when something antagonizes or upsets it" (Bernstein 41). Cortical Spreading Depression (CSD). It has an acronym and everything. I feel better about it already.
If I weren't using the same Goodreads rating scale I used earlier this year to measure Don Quixote, I would add more stars here, because Bernstein is a good teacher. She's kind. She's calming, and she has information that can help migraine sufferers get some kind of plan together to handle the pain. She speaks with equal enthusiasm to those who want to avoid taking medication and those ready to take anything necessary to stop a migraine. There are good reasons for both kinds of decisions, she assures. So yes, I recommend this book. It's a good one.
"There is probably no field in medicine so strewn with the debris of misdiagnosis and mistreatment, and of well-intentioned but wholly mistaken medical an surgical interventions." -Oliver Sacks, Migraine
Very factual and very helpful. He little anecdotes made the book seem more personable and relatable rather than just straight facts. Iām definitely glad I read it, and am definitely gonna make some changes in my life š
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quite good, I suppose. If you have already read a lot about migraines, or neurology or pharmacology in your life with migraines, you probably know most of this already. However would be an excellent book if you haven't, also the charts etc to fill in with headache patterns etc well worth the purchase price alone.