Prevention of Migraines

Migraine prophylaxis or migraine prevention refers to trying to prevention migraines from occuring in the first place.

Preventing a Migraine Headache

For some, this means preventing any symptom of migraine from occuring. For others, it includes intervention that begins at first symptoms (think food craving, yawning, neck pain, aura, or other minimal head pain). There are many layers to the therapy. Some things that the patient does for themselves, some things that involves the physician raising the threshold to get any migraine symptom in the first place, and then finally, a strategy to attack the migraine at its earliest stages before it can cause any disability.

It is critical that the patient has a physician who listens to them and takes a history as to the number of headache free days and not just the “migraine days” or severe headache days. Dr. Loftus thinks of migraine treatment as a “team sport” and it is most critical in patients with frequent migraine requiring a prevention. See what Dr. Loftus’ patients say about his practice here.

Rebound headache is a type of daily headache which occurs from the overuse of migraine medications. Basically, the medication itself becomes the cause of the next trigger. It is fortunately very infrequent and easy to treat if the rebounding agent is a triptan, caffeine, or an NSAID. It is much more difficult to treat when the offending agent is a narcotic or contains butalbital.  The use of prophylaxis in patients having more than 2 headaches per week should be universal even if the headaches are not particularly disabled, particularly in those younger than 40 since headaches tend to get worse as one approaches the early 40s. Many patients with 1 – 2 headaches per week will need prevention unless the patient is disability free. In some patients having even one or two disabling headaches each month is enough to justify migraine prevention if they are severe enough to put the patient to bed.

The first step of prevention is trying to eliminate the common triggers. Ask yourself the following questions. Do I get regular sleep? Do I skip meals? If I travel across time zones, do I try and prepare my body for this before I leave? Do I have a strategy when I get there? Are there specific foods that I eat that I know trigger a headache? The most common food triggers are caffiene and possibly chocolate. While many triggers are not possible to avoid, such as weather changes and outside stressors, minimizing those that you can to something about is commonly very helpful when one is beginning to try and better manage their migraine disability.

Once the lifestyle preventative measures have been considered, the next most important step is to make sure the patient is not potentially having rebound headaches. Any medication that is being taken twice or more weekly could potentially be causing rebound headaches. Usually, rebound headache are causied by medications taken on a near daily basis. Rebound headaches from triptans and NSAIDs have never been shown to interfere with migraine prevention. Rebound headaches from opioids and butalbital do interefere with attempts at prevention. Many times, a low rebounding but less convenient medication – such as the injectable NSAID ketorolac or injectable dihydroergotamine is used to substitute for the potentially offending agent. Many times a multi-layered approach at prevention is tried first before proceeding to a more formal medication discontinuation trial when the risk of rebound is low (triptans, NSAIDs) or the acute pain is high and the patient feels they have to have it.

How Can I Help My Doctor Help Me

You need to gather real time information on your headaches. Your physician needs the number of headaches, medication usage, and disability. It is also helpful to have your headaches properly classified. Dr. Loftus designed the iPhone and iPod touch app iHeadache to do all of this for you. The value of iHeadache is that it will produce reports that you and your physician will be able to use to properly diagnose your headache, determine if prevention is warranted, and to determine over time if therapy is working. An Android version and web based version is currently under development.

There are now many types of prevention available. If cost is the primary consideration, then there is a number of oral therapies available. There are quite cheap with even cash prices without insurance running less than $20 per month. When oral therapies are not desired, there are a number of migraine procedures that can be done. Some of there are $100 per month. Finally, we have the injectable Botox, Monoclonal Antibodies against CGRP (MAAC – Ajovy, Emgality) or its receptor (MAACR – Aimovig). These medications are $500-600 per month. At Bellaire Neurology, the ultimate decision is made between the patient and Dr. Loftus depending on cost, comorbid diseases (other disease present such as depression, anxiety, fibromyalgia, asthma, and epilepsy), patient weight, potential to get pregnant, and potential of known risks and unknown risks of the various therapies.

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five star patient reviews dr loftus
Five star patient reviews

Tabitha H.(Patient Since 2017)

I have suffered with migraines since 2012. Not just any migraines severe, debilitating migraines . I would be bedridden for days, weeks and at one point even months. I have been to doctors all over Louisiana and Texas since the end of 2012. I finally started going to a neuro-ophthalmologist in the Houston area in either 2015 or 16. ( Dr. Rosa Tang ) She was treating me for another health problem that I have been suffering with since 2012 as well. When I gave her my medical history I told her about my migraines. They would be so severe at times that I would get migraines in my eyes and it would feel like someone was stabbing me with a knife in my eyes. I would also get extremely nauseated and have even thrown up on several occasions due to the severity of my migraines. Dr. Tang referred me to Dr. Loftus sometime around the beginning of 2017. Honestly, I thought why? I’ve been to all these other doctors and had very little hope that he would be able to help me. I met with Dr. Loftus and he was very thorough. He stayed in the room with me asking questions for at least 20 minutes. He started me on a new medicine and did treatment on me that day. From that day forward my migraines have gotten so much better. I’m slowly getting my life back. We have had to adjust my medicine a couple of times. But I can tell a huge difference since I began going there. Yes, I still do get migraines however, they are nowhere near as severe as they used to be. I can function so much better now since Dr Loftus has been training me. He doesn’t just throw his hands up in the air and say I don’t know how to help you, he keeps trying new things until he finds a solution. He is phenomenal, his staff is great and I’m so thankful that God made a way and lead me to his office. I highly, highly recommend him if anyone out there has had their life stolen from them by migraines.

Jennifer C.(Patient Since 2019)

Grateful that after having grown accustomed to tolerating a manageable level.of pain for so many years, Dr. Loftus introduced me to and offered new approaches.

Dr. Brian Loftus, MD square profile picture

Providing headache and hyperhidrosis care & wellness for over 25 years.

Dr. Brian Loftus, M.D.

Dr. Loftus is Board Certified in Headache Medicine as well as Neurology. In private practice since 1994, Dr. Loftus’ practice has gotten busier and he has decided to concentrate his practice in areas that he can make a particular difference compared to other neurologist. Therefore, Dr. Loftus has chosen to focus his neurology practice on headaches & head painheadaches during pregnancy, and hyperhidrosis. In the spring of 2006, Dr. Loftus relocated his practice from the Texas Medical Center to Bellaire, just 5 miles west. He has been named a Texas Monthly “Super Doctor” and an H Texas magazine “Top Doctor” multiple times.