7 Natural Ways For Preventing and Treating Headaches

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Headache is a common illness that can affect your work or your lifestyle.There’s many medicine to treat it but prevention is always the best. Here’s some way to prevent and treat it. Check out the article we found at Health.

Rest

Headaches are often a sign that your body needs a break, says Elizabeth Loder, MD, chief of the headache and pain division at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and President of the American Headache Society. “Many people are very busy and are reluctant to take the time, but if you consider the trade off of spending 10 minutes to close the blinds, lie down, and relax when you feel a headache forming, that might be better use of your time than being incapacitated later on after it gets worse,” she says.

Mark W. Green, MD, director of the Center for Headache and Pain Medicine at Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York City, agrees. He recommends lying down in a dark, well-ventilated room. If you can, he adds, try to sleep for an hour or so. “Rather than fighting sleep and making things worse, this can be a great treatment.”

Eat small, frequent meals

If you haven’t eaten anything in a while, that aching or fuzzy feeling may be a result of low blood sugar. In this case, eating something right away could nip the nagging sensation in the bud. Some research suggests that foods rich in magnesium, such as spinach, tofu, olive oil, or sunflower or pumpkin seeds, may be especially helpful.

In general, Dr. Green advises his headache patients to graze on small meals throughout the day, rather than three large ones at breakfast, lunch, and dinner. “This way your blood sugar stays more consistent and you won’t experience those types of crashes.”

Ice your forehead

Lying down with a chilly wet washcloth or cold compress over your forehead or eyes may provide temporary relief from a nagging headache, and may even help it disappear completely, says Dr. Loder. “You can also make little ice popsicles in the freezer and rub the forehead or temples for up to 10 minutes,” she says. Many people think that ice dulls pain by shrinking blood vessels, but Dr. Loder says that in the case of headaches, it’s more likely a “counter irritation” effect: “If your brain is paying attention to the cold stimulus, it’s not paying attention to the pain.” But regardless of how it works, she says, it can be a useful and effective ritual for people who have recurring head pain.

Take a hot shower

People tend to prefer cold over heat when it comes to topical headache treatments, but sometimes a steamy shower may be just what you need, says Dr. Green. “People who wake up with head pain—and that’s not rare, by the way—often try to stay in bed and pretend it’s not real, or hope that it will go away.” That almost never works, he says. What can help is getting your day started with a cup of coffee (if you’re a regular coffee drinker), a bit of breakfast, and a hot shower to wake you up. If your headache is related to a cold or sinus pressure, he adds, the moist, warm air can clear your nasal passages as well.

Get a massage

One of the most low-tech and old-fashioned ways to treat a headache is still one of the most effective, says Dr. Loder. “Many people find that gentle pressure on the temples can, at least temporarily, relieve pain.” In fact, any type of rubdown may help relieve or prevent headaches. In a study from New Zealand, migraine sufferers had less frequent pain and slept better during weeks they received massages than others who didn’t. And a 2010 Spanish study found that patients with recurring tension headaches reported better psychological states, reduced stress, and fewer symptoms within 24 hours after receiving a 30-minute massage.

Try acupressure

According to Traditional Chinese Medicine practices, applying pressure to a point on the hand between the thumb and index finger can help relieve headache pain. Simply squeeze the indentation between the two digits with the thumb and index finger of your opposite hand and massage in a circular motion for five minutes, then switch hands. “It’s certainly a harmless thing to try, and at the very least it’s a distraction from the pain,” says Dr. Loder, who adds that it may also he helpful to rub ice on this spot for a few minutes. You could also try acupuncture. The technique, which uses long needles inserted into the skin to stimulate trigger points throughout the body, has been shown to help prevent migraines as well as frequent tension-type headaches.

Stay hydrated

Headache is one of the first signs of dehydration. To make sure you’re drinking enough fluids, try to consume them throughout the day, rather than just guzzling them down at meal times or during periods of heavy physical activity, suggests Dr. Green. Institute of Medicine guidelines say that adults should consume between 11 and 15 cups of water a day, but that also counts liquid from other sources—like low-calorie liquids (tea and skim or low-fat milk, for example) as well as fruits and vegetables. Even moderate coffee consumption contributes to your daily fluid intake; a 2014 study published in PLoS One debunked the long-standing theory that its caffeine content contributed to dehydration.

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Read Full Article: 21 Natural Ways to Prevent and Treat headaches



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2 Responses to “7 Natural Ways For Preventing and Treating Headaches”

  1. Sandra Reaper Barnett

    Apr 27. 2016

    Tammie Barnett Lee

    Reply to this comment
  2. Tammie Barnett Lee

    Apr 27. 2016

    Thanks mother

    Reply to this comment

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