Migraine Headaches

  • Young men's version of this guide

headache

Most people have headaches once in a while, but not everyone gets the same type of headache and some people get more than one type of headache. Migraine headaches are a specific kind of headache that cause other symptoms along with head pain.

What causes migraine?

It is now believed that migraine is a neurological disorder (a condition that affects a person’s nervous system). They often run in families and there are environmental factors that may be involved too.

Migraine headache is not the same thing as a bad headache! People who suffer from migraine are often very sensitive to light, sound, and smell. Each migraine can be different, and symptoms can also vary from person to person.

What are the symptoms of migraine?

People with migraines have throbbing, pulsating head pain on one side or both sides of their head. Children are more likely to have headaches on both sides; older teens and adults are more likely to have headaches on one side of the head. The pain usually lasts from 4-72 hours. However, before the headache begins, some people experience an aura (meaning a sign or signal that a migraine is coming, usually described as visual changes).

Other symptoms may include:

  • Abdominal (belly) pain, nausea, or vomiting with headache
  • Sensitivity to light (sunlight or room lights bother you)
  • Sensitivity to sound
  • Sensitivity to normal touch during migraine (brushing hair or wearing contact lens bothers you during the migraine)
  • Aura before or during the headache; Some people see spots or colors, wavy lights, have unusual vision changes, or numbness or tingling in the fingers of one hand, lips, tongue, or lower face before or during a migraine headache. About one in four people who get migraines get auras before or during the headache. If you have symptoms of an aura and it is a new experience, talk with your healthcare provider.

What are migraine triggers?

Triggers are certain changes in the environment or in the body that can make a person more likely to get a migraine. People are often affected by multiple triggers, but not everyone experiences the same thing.

Triggers include:

  • Irregular sleep schedule (getting too much sleep or not enough)
  • Stress and anxiety
  • Dehydration (not drinking enough fluids)
  • Skipping meals
  • Certain foods
  • Alcohol
  • Smoking
  • Strong smells
  • Sudden changes in the weather or altitude
  • Bright or flickering lights and loud noises
  • Drinking lots of caffeinated beverages and then quitting
  • Too much physical exercise
  • Hormonal changes in girls
  • Certain medicines

Some foods including: chocolate, certain fruits and nuts, yeast, yeast, MSG, processed meats and pickled foods can be a trigger for migraine. The chance of migraine increases when a trigger food is combined with other triggers.

What can I do about triggers?

In order to figure out what your triggers are, keep a headache diary. Write down when you get a migraine, how long it lasts, what makes it better, and what might have caused it (such as skipping a meal or flickering lights at a concert). You can find an example of a headache diary here. Share this information with your health care provider so that you can come up with some answers about what’s causing your migraines (or making them worse).

Are migraines common?

Migraines affect more than 10% of people in the world. They occur in people of all ages, but often begin in the early teenage years during puberty.

Why do some people have migraines and others don’t?

Researchers believe that genetics play an important role in migraines. For example, if your parents or other close family members have migraines, you may be more likely to have them too. In fact, according to the Migraine Research Foundation, “about 90%” of migraine sufferers have a family history of migraines.” Researchers also know that although young men get more migraines than young women before puberty, women are three times more likely than men to suffer from migraine headaches later.

How are migraines diagnosed?

If you are having symptoms of migraine, make an appointment with your healthcare provider (HCP). Your provider will review your medical history and do a physical exam. They will also ask you about your symptoms and what seems to bring them on.  Your HCP will check you for other possible medical conditions or reasons why you have migraines. You might need to have blood tests and imaging of your head, such as an MRI.

How are migraines treated?

Although there’s no cure for migraines, the good news is that you can either work with your health care provider to prevent them from happening, or treat symptoms that are bothering you. A health care provider can also prescribe medicine to take on a daily basis that can help prevent future migraines as well as medicine you can take at the beginning of a headache to help it go away. Treatment will depend on how often you get migraines, how severe the migraines are, and other symptoms you may have.

You may be able to prevent migraines if you:

  • Eat regular meals
  • Drink plenty of fluids
  • Keep a regular sleep schedule
  • Avoid headache triggers
  • Take a preventive headache medication prescribed by your healthcare provider
  • Practice relaxation techniques such as meditation, mindfulness, biofeedback, and other complimentary treatments that are often prescribed by Pain clinics

If you’re having a migraine and you want to treat the symptoms, you can:

  • Take an over-the-counter pain medicine or the medicine that your health care provider prescribes for your headaches. There are a number of over-the-counter headache medicines, some of which specify that they are good for migraines. Make sure to take only the amount on the instructions. If that amount doesn’t help your headache, taking more is not a good idea. You may want to try a different medicine the next time you get a headache. Likewise, if your health care provider prescribes a medicine, it’s important to take it according to the directions.
  • Rest in a dark room. Sometimes an ice pack wrapped in cloth placed on the back of your neck can help.

Note: It’s important NOT to take over the counter medicine (such as ibuprofen) more than twice a week. This can cause more headaches called “rebound” headaches because your body gets used to having the medication in your system.

If you ever have a severe headache, changes in vision (double vision, blurry vision), a stiff neck, confusion, severe vomiting, fever/chills, headaches that wake you from sleep, or other new or concerning symptoms that occur along with a headache, call your healthcare provider right away, or go to the closest Emergency Room to get checked out.

Our health guides are developed through a systematic, rigorous process to ensure accuracy, reliability, and trustworthiness. Written and reviewed by experienced healthcare clinicians from Boston Children's Hospital, a Harvard Medical School teaching hospital and consistently ranked as a top hospital by Newsweek and U.S. News & World Report, these guides combine clinical expertise, specialized knowledge, and evidence-based medicine. We also incorporate research and best practices from authoritative sources such as the CDC, NIH, PubMed, top medical journals, and UpToDate.com. Clinical specialists and subject matter experts review and edit each guide, reinforcing our commitment to high-quality, factual, scientifically accurate health information for young people.