There are many different types of headache disorders and diseases. Tension headache is one type that results from muscle overuse or spasm. Migraine is a neurologic disorder affecting the brain and the entire body. Two very different disorders and two very different treatments.
No - Atenolol is a beta blocker for high blood pressure, irregular heartbeat, migraines & tension or cluster headaches. Amitriptyline is a tricyclic antidepressant but can also be used to treat nuropathic pain and migraines.
Stress is not a good thing to be feeling when you just got home from a hard, busy, tiring day. You can visit www.mayoclinic.com/health/tension-headache/DS00304 to find information on stress headaches and how to deal with them.
because all right
Tension is a force on a bridge that pulls, or acts to expand the thing it is acting on.
No, exposure to radon gas, even a large amount, won't give you a headache. Radon is an inert or noble gas, and it is radioactive. Radon exposure is a bad thing as it is the second most common cause of lung cancer. But you won't be able to detect radon by any of your senses, and it will not directly cause you to be "sick" or for a "migrane" to appear. It will, after time, cause cancer because the radiation damage your lungs get from the long exposure. In the mean time, you won't feel a thing. At least not because of an exposure to radon gas.
Migraine headaches are not a dangerous thing. They are rarely life threatening.
no, the best thing to do is to drink plenty of water and rest.
Yes stress is a tension thing. It causes the person to take tension. It causes one to think negatively.
element-arent they doing that power to the planet thing
no there are not any killer moths all moths arent harmful
No she doesnt, Katherine says "Tattoos arent really my thing"
The National Headache Foundation estimates of the 30 million Americans who are known to suffer migraine headaches, this number is about half of the estimated 60 million total people who have migraines on a regular basis but have not been diagnosed.Migraine headaches often follow a pattern of that a person can soon recognize once they are alerted to be aware of certain triggers, circumstances and situations in their lives within an hour or two of the onset of the migraine headaches.When a person eventually figures out what thing or things are triggering the headaches to occur, the answer to what helps migraines best becomes rather apparent. By paying very close attention to what you are eating, feeling, touching and breathing, immediately prior to a migraine headache you are well on your way to learning how to avoid or at least control your contact and doing what is best to help your migraines.A good place to begin your review is to consider common migraine headache triggers:Emotional stress, tension and worry. Strong emotional states causes what is called the "flight or fight response" that begins a release of brain chemicals that dilate blood vessels in the brain, leading to a migraine headache.Sensitivity to certain foods, food preservatives and food coloring agents.Caffeine, found in coffee, tea, cola drinks, and chocolate, as well as certain prescription and non-prescription medications.Rapidly moving weather fronts that cause storms.Fatigue, lack of sleep and heavy exercise.Hunger, and/or a rapid drop in blood sugar levels.Changes in the normal sleep pattern, even when not accompanied by fatigue or lack of sleep; just a simple alternation of a normal sleeping pattern can cause a migraine headache for some people.The best help for migraines is to eliminate all known triggers if possible, or at least to control them. The more triggers are kept out of your life, the fewer migraines you will have.