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Headaches & Migraines
Chronic headaches and migraines afflict many people. The severity of pain can
go from mild and intermittent to episodes of debilitating throbbing, unrelenting
agony, as well as nausea. Relief comes from a variety of means, including over-the-counter
medications and prescription drugs, rest, and ice/heat packs on the forehead
or neck. Pain pills, however, often only cover up the headaches temporarily
and the headaches come back.
Sources of headaches include, but are not limited to, certain kinds of foods,
sounds and excessive noise or bright lights, changes in blood sugar, and even
too much exercise.
Numerous studies have found that chiropractic care helps a variety of headaches.
Tension headaches are one of the most common types of headaches. Recent studies
show that many of these originate in the neck where the cervical vertebrae are
located. For headaches that originate in the cervical, or neck, area, chiropractic
treatment, such as spinal manipulation, has been shown to be quite effective.
A 2001 Duke University study, for example, found that spinal manipulation provided
relief for patients with headaches that originate in the neck, and resulted
in fewer side effects than medication. Researchers in that study concluded that
such treatments as relaxation training, thermal biofeedback combined with relaxation
training, electromyographic (EMG) biofeedback, cognitive-behavioral therapy,
and to a lesser degree, acupuncture, are all modestly effective in treating
migraine headaches.
Migraine headaches, perhaps the most severe headaches, also respond to chiropractic
care. In one study, 74.7% of migraine patients were greatly improved under chiropractic
care, and the success rate was maintained two years after the care ended. Then
there was the Parker trial funded by the Australian government that found chiropractic
care effective for Migraine. A follow-up study of the Parker trial concluded,
"The trial clearly established that chiropractic was an effective treatment
for migraine."
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