Dehydration is one of the most common Migraine triggers for patients. Salt forces the body to conserve water - it is not allowed to be flushed out by the kidneys. While salt is a potent trigger for some patients, it may be helpful to others. One reason may be that they are suffering dehydration. See your physician or headache specialist for appropriate diagnosis and treatment of Migraine and headache disorders.
Excedrin Migraine, Advil Migraine, and Motrin Migraine Pain are equally effective for mild to moderate migraines. You can also try eating a very salty snack like a small bag of salty chips to help reduce it.
Salt, in large or small amounts, if found in a very wide variety of foods. Meats, eggs, cheeses, vegetables, and snack foods, are usually flavored with salt. Potato chips and corn chips are very salty.
yes it does
No. Kiwi are small, flightless birds. they are not salty. Kiwifruit are also not salty, being fruit.
Anchovy
"Small" is a subjective term. Small bags of Chocolate Chips in my grocery are 8 oz bags.
it is because salty water is made of the dirty water which come from mountains melted water its small salty particles makes all the water salty thats what the reason is about salty water
The best diet advice for migraine sufferers is to eat wholesome and unprocessed foods, and to eat 4-5 small meals a day. Stay away from alcohol and chocolate, which are known migraine triggers.
Chips are high in fat, which means that they're high in calories - and the main goal of any diet is to reduce the amounts of calories that you eat daily.Chips obviously won't measure up as a particularly sensible choice in the circumstances.If you want to eat chips, then you have to make room for that by adjusting the rest of your diet accordingly. You can probably fit in a small bowl of chips if the rest of the meals that day are really strict.
small?
slow cooked potato chips in small kettles using either safflower and/or sunflower oil
Barnacles