Migraine Myths Canfield OH

Millions of Americans are affected by migraines, but according to experts, the disease is often underdiagnosed, misdiagnosed, or simply misunderstood. Read on as we debunk the disorder's biggest myths.Myth: A migraine is just a severe headache.In reality, headaches are just one symptom of migraine disease.

Edward James Cupler, MD
301-402-1931
Canfield, OH
Carl Franklin Ansevin
(330) 726-7900
7417 South Ave
Youngstown, OH
Amarjeet Singh Nagpaul, MD
755 Boardman Canfield Rd Ste P1
Youngstown, OH
Carl Franklin Ansevin, MD
330-726-7900
7417 South Ave
Youngstown, OH
Robert J Brocker
(330) 747-9215
1616 Covington St
Youngstown, OH
Dariush Saghafi, MD
330-332-7639
Youngstown, OH
Hira Lal Khanna, MD
330-629-2492
1280 Boardman Canfield Rd
Youngstown, OH
Dr.Steven Kalavsky
330-533-8270
8423 Market St # 300
Youngstown, OH
Brian Patrick Brocker, MD
330-747-9215
1616 Covington St
Youngstown, OH
Robert Lee Gilliland, MD
330-743-5761
540 Parmalee Ave Ste 510
Youngstown, OH
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Migraine Myths

Millions of Americans are affected by migraines, but according to experts, the disease is often underdiagnosed, misdiagnosed, or simply misunderstood. Read on as we debunk the disorder's biggest myths.

Myth: A migraine is just a severe headache.

In reality, headaches are just one symptom of migraine disease. Unlike a typical headache, migraine disease has many symptoms, including nausea, vomiting, auras (light spots), and sensitivity to light and sound. In serious cases, migraine can also cause numbness, difficulty in speech, and severe semi-hemispherical head pain. A single migraine attack can last for hours, days, or even weeks.

Myth: People who are depressed, uptight, or compulsive are more likely to get migraine headaches, which are caused by psychological factors.

Migraine is a neurological disease, not a psychological disorder. Researchers who have studied migraine disease have found no links to certain personality types. Migraine pain is caused when serotonin levels drop, and researchers believe this causes the trigeminal nerve to release substances called neuropeptides, which travel to the brain's outer covering. There they cause blood vessels to become dilated and inflamed, which results in headache pain.

Myth: Migraine headaches are caused by allergies.

There are no proven links between allergies and migraine attacks. Allergies and headaches are common occurrences, so when people have both, they may assume there is a connection...

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