Your muscles need more blood circulating when you exercise, and this often makes the blood vessels swell which causes headaches. They also come when you don't hydrate your body well enough during and after exercise, keeping yourself hydrated enough for exercise, and not breathing properly during exercise which restricts oxygen and blood flow. Make sure when you run you focus on breathing in and breathing out. It sounds stupid, but you'd be amazed how many people hold their breath while running.
See: http://www.webmd.com/migraines-headaches/guide/triggers-exercise
You get really sick! You can also get a headache, feel sick to the stomach, run a fever, and get chills.
The International Headache Society does not recognize a diagnosis of Acupressure Headache or Normal Headache. There are many different types of headache disorders however, and some types may be triggered by acupressure.
cluster headache
There is no headache inventor.
Just run the machine until he has worn down enough to pull out easily. I suggest you wear earplugs to protect you and your headache from the screaming.
The plural of headache is headaches.
A severe headache is a migraine.
Cephalgia is the medical term for headache.
Arnold P. Friedman has written: 'Headache, diagnosis and treatment' -- subject(s): Headache 'Headaches in children' -- subject(s): Children, Diseases, Headache, Headache in children 'The headache book' -- subject(s): Headache
There is no diagnosis called monotonous headache in the IHC. There are however Chronic types of headache, as well as a diagnosis called New Daily Persistent Headache. Headache itself is not a diagnosis. There are many different types of headache, so seeing a doctor or headache specialist is very important for proper diagnosis and treatment.
Reading can be a headache trigger for certain individuals, depending upon which type of headache disorder they suffer. For appropriate diagnosis and treatment of headache disorders, consult a board certified headache specialist.
The treatment for your headache depends on what type of headache it is (there is a long list of different kinds of headaches) and what has caused it. For best results, consult a headache specialist who is trained to diagnosis and treat headache disorders.