If you begin or continue to experience migraines during pregnancy,
what can you do about it? Do you have to suffer with no medication for
nine long months? Or can you take the drugs that helped you through before
you were expecting?
You should follow non medication strategies as the first line of defense
and the least risky way to prevent and handle your migraines while you
are pregnant. These include physical therapy, biofeedback, massage therapy,
acupuncture, and relaxation. If you’ve never before considered such
alternative treatments to manage pain, your incentive is great at this
time to try out one or more of the following:
Physical therapy: A directed program incorporating massage, joint
mobilization, and strengthening exercises directed at specific muscle
groups for the relief of pain and spasm.
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Biofeedback: A technique that many migraine sufferers find useful
through which you learn to relax muscles using a machine that shows
you a picture of your muscle tension.
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Massage: A familiar, pleasurable, hands-on-your-body rub-down that
stimulates circulation and relaxes the muscles.
Relaxation therapy: Self-guided techniques to bring about overall
mind-body relaxation.
Acupuncture: The Chinese practice of inserting needles into various
points in your body to stimulate the production of endorphins to relieve
pain.
If you are unsure of alternative medicine and have tended to dismiss
it as being out of the mainstream therapy, consider one major study
where thirty pregnant women with headaches who were treated with either
biofeedback, relaxation training, or physical therapy. These types of
treatment benefited a whopping 80% of the women studied, who reported
significant relief in their headache diaries. These same women were
followed after delivery. Fully 67% of the women who had received these
alternative treatments still had a significant decrease in their headaches
for up to one year after giving birth.
Another non medication option: If you can get the approval from your
physician, you might want to try magnesium supplementation for migraine
prevention. Several studies have shown benefit for some migraine sufferers.
Magnesium sulfate is also used to treat eclampsia, a complication of
pregnancy that causes high blood pressure and kidney abnormalities and
can cause seizures and other brain abnormalities. Magnesium supplements
are probably safe in pregnancy, although the optimal dose for migraine
prevention has not yet been established.
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