Natural Treatment for Migraine Newark DE

Whichever therapies you choose for treating headaches, the key is to use them regularly—singly or in combination—as part of a strategy to stop headaches before they start.

Carl Ramses Yacoub
(302) 996-9010
537 Stanton Christiana Rd
Newark, DE
Specialty
Pediatric Neurology

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N Joseph Schrandt, MD
(302) 892-9400
620 Stanton Christiana Rd Ste 201
Newark, DE
Specialties
Neurology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Mn Med Sch-Minneapolis, Minneapolis Mn 55455
Graduation Year: 1983

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Dr.John Townsend
(302) 731-3017
774 Christiana Rd # 201
Newark, DE
Gender
M
Education
Medical School: Pa State Univ Coll Of Med
Year of Graduation: 1984
Speciality
Neurologist
General Information
Hospital: Christiana Care -Wilmington, Wilmington, De
Accepting New Patients: Yes
RateMD Rating
5.0, out of 5 based on 1, reviews.

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Neil Joseph Schrandt
(302) 892-9400
620 Stanton Christiana Rd
Newark, DE
Specialty
Neurology

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Dr.Michael Carunchio
(302) 731-3017
774 Christiana Rd # 201
Newark, DE
Gender
M
Speciality
Neurologist
General Information
Accepting New Patients: Yes
RateMD Rating
5.0, out of 5 based on 1, reviews.

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Dr.Carl Yacoub
(302) 996-9010
537 Stanton Christiana Rd # 10
Newark, DE
Gender
M
Education
Medical School: St GeorgeS Univ, Sch Of Med, St GeorgeS
Year of Graduation: 1991
Speciality
Neurologist
General Information
Accepting New Patients: Yes
RateMD Rating
1.7, out of 5 based on 18, reviews.

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Lee Potter Dresser, MD
(302) 892-9400
620 Stanton Christiana Rd Ste 302
Newark, DE
Specialties
Neurology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Bowman Gray Sch Of Med Of Wake Forest Univ, Winston-Salem Nc 27157
Graduation Year: 1987

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Anthony Munson
(302) 731-3017
774 Christiana Rd
Newark, DE
Specialty
Neurology

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Sung Ho Bae
(302) 731-3017
774 Christiana Rd
Newark, DE
Specialty
Neurology

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Dr.Alan Fink
(302) 731-3017
774 Christiana Road #101
Newark, DE
Gender
M
Education
Medical School: Suny At Buffalo Sch Of Med & Biomedical Sci
Year of Graduation: 1970
Speciality
Neurologist
General Information
Accepting New Patients: Yes
RateMD Rating
5.0, out of 5 based on 3, reviews.

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Spotlight on Headaches

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By Christie Aschwanden

Migraine headaches slammed into Evelyn Strauss’s life during her sophomore year in college. “I would have to retreat to a dark room for two or three days every time I got one, which was every few weeks,” says the 41-year-old editor in Santa Cruz, California. “It was horrible. I had to schedule my studying around my migraines.” She tried several medications, but nothing worked. With nothing to lose, she decided to see a hypnotist. “Hypnosis got rid of the headaches completely,” she says.

Strauss’s story would not surprise Donald Penzien, a psychologist at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson. While most people quiet their headaches by popping over-the-counter pain medications or prescription headache drugs, these pills don’t work for everyone, he says. And frequent use of them can actually make the problem worse by triggering rebound headaches—pain that begins as soon as the medication wears off, requiring still more medication and perpetuating the cycle.

Penzien is convinced there’s a better way. He recently published a study analyzing the last 30 years of research into often-overlooked behavioral treatments for headaches, including mind-body therapies like biofeedback and hypnosis. His conclusion: These treatments may actually manage headaches better than drugs. In fact, the real trick to taming headaches is to keep them from developing in the first place—which these mind-body techniques and other alternative remedies can help you do. If a headache does slip through, some of the same treatments can curb symptoms, too.

Whichever therapies you choose, the key is to use them regularly—singly or in combination—as part of a strategy to stop headaches before they start. “Prevention is the name of the game,” Penzien says.

Identify your triggers
Experts classify headaches into dozens of different types, but tension headaches and migraines are by far the most common, and some people battle both types. No one’s 100 percent sure what causes headaches, but for most people, they’re set off by one or more triggers, which can differ from person to person.

That’s why the first step in a preventive strategy is recognizing what your triggers are and finding ways to avoid them. Common culprits include stress, disrupted sleep patterns, bright light, noise, alcohol, caffeine, and certain foods like cheese and chocolate. (It can be helpful to keep a headache diary, noting when the pain comes on and what you ate, drank, and did beforehand.)

When journalist Lila Guterman, 29, moved to London in 1998, she noticed that her previously infrequent migraines suddenly became regular. “They were often totally incapacitating,” she says. Thinking about what had changed since her move, she realized that she was making more trips to the coffeepot at her new job. So she quit cold turkey. The first week sans caffeine she felt a mild headache or two, but then they disappeared entirely. “I didn’t get another headache the whol...

Author: Christie Aschwanden

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