Showing posts with label botox. Show all posts
Showing posts with label botox. Show all posts

Wednesday, 18 March 2009

Day 86 - Headache Specialist


"There are several different types of headache. The main types are:

* Tension headaches (also called stress headaches, muscular headaches) - a mild to moderate headache that may last minutes or days and tends to recur. The pain is fairly constant and felt in both sides of the head and neck as a pressure or tension. Most importantly, exercise doesn't make it worse and there are no additional symptoms such as nausea.


* Migraine (see
Day 4 - Migraine post.) - symptoms can be variable, and there are several different types of migraine , but this is usually a moderate to severe one-sided headache that pulsates or throbs. Importantly, it gets worse with activity and there are additional symptoms, particularly nausea and vomiting, diarrhoea and an increased sensitivity to noise, light or smells. Some people experience an aura (symptoms such as flashing lights) before the headache.

* Cluster headaches - frequent, short-lived (less than an hour), one-sided headaches across the temple or around the eye and occurring once or more a day, and often disrupting sleep. Headaches recur for several weeks then subside, although another cluster may develop months later.


* Chronic daily headaches - these may be of any of the above types, and occur for at least 15 days a month for at least three months.


Headaches are generally divided into either primary (not related to another disorder) or secondary (caused by other things such as head injuries, high blood pressure or a brain tumour). With secondary headaches, it's essential to treat the underlying cause as this may prove fatal."*

*http://www.bbc.co.uk/health/conditions/headache1.shtml

This afternoon I went to see one of the best neurologists in the UK, who has been ‘a full time headache specialist for the last 12 years’, according to his website.

I described my headache to him in depth, emphasizing that I have already ruled out the possibility of the pain being related to my eyes, my sinuses, tropical diseases, low blood pressure, etc. etc.

As I recounted all the details, the doctor took notes, and explained that at the end of the session he would write a complete description of my symptoms, thereafter sending a copy to myself and to my GP with details of what medication I should take.

The doctor asked me where the pain is centred. I pointed to a specific location on my right temple. What I found very bizarre was that he did not reach out to touch the part of my head which is causing the pain. He immediately jotted down ‘right side temple headache’.

He advised taking steroid or botox injections to alleviate the symptoms.

“Botox?” I asked inquisitively. “But that’s for women who have plastic surgery”, I said. He explained that recent studies in the U.S. have demonstrated that women who suffer from headaches and who have undergone plastic surgery are no longer afflicted with headaches post surgery. As such, doctors now prescribe botox for headaches and migraines.

He thereafter told me that I will always have to carry drugs on me and take them whenever I feel the headache coming on (I guess I didn’t make myself clear when I explained that the headache doesn’t ‘come on’ - it is always there).

Needless to say, I will not be taking neither botox, nor steroids. As I believe I have a secondary headache, I need to find the underlying cause of the pain as opposed to temporarily concealing it with harmful drugs.

Once again, I am back at square one, this time £160 shorter.