![]() |
My former Neuro said Depakote is the most common culprit for migraines in his patients. Mine stopped when I quit Keppra. It's kind of weird, I just noticed I haven't had one in ages!
|
Depakote ER is used to treat Migraines. But not exactly sure about
regular depakote. But when it comes to the description you gave in the first post here, I've heard of something very close to that happening and I am afraid it was something a lot different. It also involved a headache, but in Derrick who was in 4th grade was on 2 medicines for seizures, and one was depakote, he might have just started a third, I'm honestly not positive, we had been struggling for the summer months, and it was septemer, and he had a really bad headache, and a hallucination that wouldn't go away. We ended up in the emergency room, and he was admitted, to the ward. But the thing with the depakote, is that we had been spending the summer checking the level it was fluctuating so bad that it was either way to high or way to low. every single week. We had a standing order to have it checked, whenever I chose. And definately every 10 days. But the hallucinations, made him come off immediately in the hospital. |
Julie, how's Michael doing now? I hope that headache is gone and he's feeling 100%.
|
He got another one yesterday. We really need our new insurance cards. I've got an appt for him next week with the epi doc.
Thanks for asking. He thinks it's so neat that you guys think about him. |
Migraines and delayed food reactions
You may want to check into food allergy testing for the migraines. I came across this site (www.foodallergytest.com) a couple of years ago and have been sending clients and contacts to it ever since with some phenomenal results. It makes perfectly good sense to me now after my recent studies, especially after seeing the obvious relationship between food and seizures.
I had a veterinary client last year who was self-employed/uninsured and paying over $700 for Imitrex each month. She paid for the Sage Test above out of her pocket (about $550) and then ate according to the results. Her migraines stopped in less than 3 weeks and has been free of them ever since. She has been over 5 months migraine-free, saving herself over $3000 in medication fees. (Of course, the cost if the test is usually covered by insurance). When she showed me her allergy card listing the foods to avoid, she said "And it is all of the foods I like the most." I told her "Of course they are! You remember the lecture: The wheat, dairy and soy you reacted to are doing the damage to your intestinal villi which, in turn, is setting you up for the others you are allergic to. That is the known cause of secondary food allergies in the gluten, casein, or soy intolerant." BUT, what I learned from her was that I, too, was coffee allergic. That had never entered my mind until I saw it on her card. Then the planets aligned. I was getting sleepy, having some heartburn/gas, and some headaches after drinking coffee, things that were always associated with gluten. Now that I have been off coffee for a while, I never feel that way*. This makes perfect sense now, as I drank A LOT of coffee for the depression associated with gluten and dairy. My secondary allergy to coffee makes perfect sense. (*Tea does not do this to me so it's not the caffeine.) I hope this helps, John |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:57 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
vBulletin Optimisation provided by
vB Optimise (Lite) -
vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.