Good News For The Treatment of Migraines
By jinny on Apr 7, 2009 in headaches
I had my first migraine equivalent when I was a youngster. I would have severe cases of vomiting and at the time the doctors could not come up with the cause. When I was in my late teens I had my first experience with visual disturbances and this was quite scary because I lost part of my vision for a time. In all these cases, I did not have an actual headache.
Later on in life the headaches began and that started numerous trips to the doctor along with a great number of tests, including a few brain scans. Nothing organic was found and many years later I was diagnosed with having migraine headaches. My mother had also suffered from them.
Then started the search for a medication that worked well and that I could tolerate. For at least 30 years I was taking an ergot compound but the last time I went to renew the prescription I was told that it was now taken off the market because they were unsure about the side effects. I found that surprising, because the drug had been around for over 40 years. I was then introduced to sumatriptan and to my dismay found that it was nearly 100 times more expensive that my old reliable ergot and came with a host of unpleasant side effects.
I found that the sumatriptan did get rid of my migraine and I would have relieve for about 12 hours but then the headache would come back with a vengeance and I would have to repeat the cycle. This would actually go on for at least three days. At the end of it, I was feeling like I had been stomped on by a herd of elephants! It would then take me another few days to get over the fatigue and lethargy.
I was continually searching for alternative treatments and would try various things that were recommended but it wasn’t until I recently found this wonderful little book called “The Magnesium Solution for Migraine Headaches. How to Use Magnesium to Prevent and Relieve Migraine & Cluster Headaches Naturally” by Jay S. Cohen, MD, that I found what I had been looking for.
Magnesium is nature’s natural vascular relaxant in both animals and humans. It is not a synthetic drug with all kinds of adverse effects. It is interesting to note that in certain areas of Africa and Japan, the number of migraine sufferers are among the lowest in the world due to the fact that the dietary level of magnesium in these areas is high.
Magnesium is essential for the normal functions of the body. In fact it plays a major role in more than 300 different enzymatic reactions that take place within all of the body’s cells. It has a relaxing effect on the central nervous system and quietens the actions of the sympathetic nervous system. It is also vitally important to healing wounds, muscular function, sleep, growth and healthy pregnancy. Magnesium has been defined as the ‘king of minerals’ and has been noted as having solved more incurable and mysterious symptoms than any other mineral.
Please do not run out and buy the first bottle of magnesium that your hands fall upon. Using magnesium successfully depends on finding a product that agrees with you. Some people can actually take any magnesium product, but many have difficulty with cheap, low-quality products that are not well absorbed. You can purchase magnesium carbonate, magnesium oxide, magnesium chloride, magnesium sulfate and others. To enhance absorption some companies combine magnesium with amino acids, producing magnesium maleate, magnesium citrate, magnesium lactate or magnesium aspartate, which work well for many people.
For those who have difficulty taking pills the magnesium can also come in liquid form. Even though solutions cost more than pills, for many it is well worth it, because they are the best absorbed, best tolerated and fastest acting forms of magnesium. You might want to check out Liquid Ionic Magnesium at your local health food store.
My recommendation is that you get a copy of Dr. Cohen’s book and take it along with you on your next doctor’s appointment. Mention that you would like to give it a try. There are no reliable blood tests to diagnose a deficiency. Even people who are seriously deficient will have a normal level of magnesium in the blood.
Magnesium supplementation has been the answer for myself and many other people. I hope that if you try it, it works just as well for you in relieving the terrible pain of migraine and cluster headaches.
There are many wonderful testimonials of people who have got rid of their migraines simply by changing their bodies from being acidic to being alkaline.












5 Comment(s)
By LLHanus on Apr 9, 2009 | Reply
GREAT information here! My brother suffers from Migraines…. I have posted the article for other to read on Facebook…. THANKS Jan! ((((( Love, Blessings, & Hugs)))))) Linda
By Lou on Jun 6, 2009 | Reply
Hi,
So which type do you take - magnesium carbonate, magnesium oxide, magnesium chloride or magnesium sulfate?
Thanks
By jinny on Jun 6, 2009 | Reply
Hi Lou:
I take magnesium oxide or chelated magnesium. There is a great product out there for migraines that combines magnesium, feverfew and riboflavin. It’s called MigraHealth or MigraLief. You can purchase it in some Health Food Stores, but you have to be careful that it has all three ingredients in it. There are some knockoffs. You can definitely get it over the internet. The product comes highly recommended in the book “What Your Doctor May NOT Tell you About Migraines” by Alexander Mauskop MD and Harry Fox, PhD.
By christina on Jun 12, 2009 | Reply
what kind of liquid mag do you use, i also suffer with migraines and hate taking the pills. i have wanted to try a liquid but hard too find.
By Ken Whidden on Oct 14, 2009 | Reply
I carry a product in my office called Natural Calm which is a powder that is mixed with water to give a liquid magnesium supplement.
Ken Whidden, DC
Emerald Coast Chiropractic