Migraine headaches can cause severe palpitations or a feeling of pulsation in one area of the head and are commonly associated with nausea, vomiting, and excessive sensitivity to light and sound.
Migraine attacks can cause great pain for hours or for days and are so intense that all you can think of is finding a quiet and dark place for lying down. Migraine is preceded by or accompanied by some sensory or sensory symptoms such as flashes of light, blind spots, or tingling in the arm or leg.
Medicines can help reduce the frequency and severity of migraines. If the treatment you have already used does not work, talk to your doctor about trying to use a different migraine medication. Taking the right medications, along with self-help and lifestyle changes, can make a big difference. Migraine often starts in childhood, adolescence or early adulthood. Migraines may develop through four stages, including the nodule, halo, headache and end stage, although the pain may not sequence to face all stages.
1. Gesture: A day or two migraines, you may notice minor changes that indicate the onset of migraines, including:
Suffering from constipation and depression with food cravings and hyperactivity may be accompanied by irritation and stiffness in the neck with uncontrolled yawning.
2. Halo: The aura may occur before or during migraines. Auras are symptoms of the nervous system that are usually visual disturbances, such as flashes of light. Sometimes the auras can be sensory disturbances, sensory (sensory), movement (kinetic) or word (verbal). Most people suffer from migraines without halo. Each of these symptoms starts gradually, accumulates over several minutes, and then lasts normally for 20 to 60 minutes. Examples of aura include:
Visual phenomena such as seeing different shapes, luminous spots or flashes of light, loss of vision, feeling of pins and needles in the arm or leg, speech or language problems (loss of speech ability) and, less commonly, Migraine headaches).
Headache attack: When treatment is not offered, migraine usually lasts from four to 72 hours, but the frequency that occurs as a result of headaches varies from person to person. Migraine may suffer several times a month or much less frequently. During migraines, you may experience the following symptoms:
Feel pain on one side or both sides of your head and may be associated with pain that has a pulse, flickering quality with sensitivity to light, sounds and smells sometimes, nausea, vomiting, and relief from blurred vision and may be associated with vertigo, followed by fainting sometimes.
Final Stage “Postdrome” This final stage, known as postdrome, occurs after a migraine attack. During this time you may feel depleted, although some people feel less cheerful.