![]() |
4 Day Headache... Again
I have had pretty much a non stop headache for the last 4 days, which started with a killer migraine on Friday night. I wake up with it and it escalates throughout the day to migraine status. Unfortunately migraine medicine is not helping. I already take Topamax 100 mg 2 x day to prevent these, and do have the occasional breakthru migraine, but this is unusual. It has happened before but not for along time. Last time it happened i ended up at the neuros office for a shot and a mri.. Don't really want to do that since I just moved 4 hours away and really cant afford an mri right now (lost my job a couple of weeks ago).
Any ideas what might be going on? Stress was my first guess, but if that were the case I would think the migraine meds and muscle relaxers I usually take would have worked... |
Quote:
Go to your neuro to get the shot. No need for an MRI. Make sure you inform the doctor of your current financial situation. A 4 day old headache is worth the 4 hour drive. Better yet, have someone else do the driving for you. In the meantime, check your local yellow pages for a Headache Clinic and/or a Neurologist that specializes in migraines/headaches who are located in your neighborhood. Good luck! :hug: |
I've recently relocated back to a town I used to live in and there is a neurologist I used to see nearby within 45 minutes. I however want to continue to see my current neurologist in the town i moved from. They're both good doctors but I feel my current one is above standard.
I took a vicodin and a muscle relaxer and it helped by far more than all the migraine medicine and muscle relaxers I had taken previously. Feeling much better now. Its a dull headache at this point that I can manage.. |
Quote:
Just a thought ...........Good luck in your search 4 answers! |
Quote:
|
Quote:
vodpop's statement above causes me to wonder if it was in fact a pure migraine, or if it possibly morphed. I don't doubt anyone's ability to tell what they've got, but I do get fooled myself sometimes, with cervicogenic (tension-type) headaches presenting as migraine and vice versa. I sometimes get both, or a combination of both, at the same time, and other times a HA may begin as one type and morph into the other type. As MGs & TTs require different meds, the meds for one type don't/won't work on the other. I agree with Mz Migraine that, if possible, a headache specialist is better than most neurologists (neurology is a huge field). After a string of neurologists over several years, I finally found/stumbled upon the "headache guy". |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 03:40 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
vBulletin Optimisation provided by
vB Optimise (Lite) -
vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.