Mental Health Support
Related: About this forumMy son's new medication
Well he got his medication yesterday. It's one of the new ones called Emgality. It's injectable. He used it for the first time. I watched him use it. One poke in each thigh. I has a spring action mechanism. He hates needles but I think trying the botox and the 31 injections each time helped get him beyond that. So 2 pokes in the thigh were nothing for him. I was amazed that each one would have been $600 without insurance but with insurance it was 0. I am feeling grateful. I am trying to remain hopeful. He tracks his migraines and out of the last 90 days, he had migraines for 45 days. He is so strong and resilient. My sweet fighter. He deserves to be free from pain and suffering. He is just so damn sweet, funny and kind. Then there is the insomnia and depression, it feels like if we can get a handle on one part, it will be less of a struggle to get the rest to fall in to place. I came home today and he was working out. He loves to exercise. I truly believe that we are going to find the answers for him to live his best life. I just want him to be healthy, happy and whole. Time will tell if this is the answer. Focusing on the positive. I really appreciate all the love, support and advice I have gotten from so many here. It has had a powerful impact.
unblock
(54,255 posts)It doesn't hurt to apply over-the-counter lidocaine cream 30 minutes before and ice 5 minutes before. That's what I do for my son's injections. I usually don't bother for myself at this point.
MLAA
(18,685 posts)CentralMass
(15,608 posts)chiropracter who corrected some alignment issues with her neck and spine. The appointment was to get some relief from a pinched nerve but 5 or 6 visits later, her migraines stopped.
rwsanders
(2,783 posts)http://www.eneura.com/# (seizure related migraines)
DeadLetterOffice
(1,352 posts)Its effectiveness seems inversely related to the number of migraines a person gets -- the more of a chronic migraineur you are, the less useful it is (per my neurologist)
rwsanders
(2,783 posts)As a Physical Therapist I can't prescribe one, but have mentioned to patients with migraines.
hunter
(39,073 posts)... of the can't-see and can't-think sort.
But the curled up on the bathroom floor in the dark in front of the toilet with a towel or pillow wrapped around my head nauseous extremely painful and praying-to-die migraines seem to have faded away in my later middle age.
I've had prescriptions for both oral and injectable migraine meds that worked well enough, but I was still fairly worthless even after taking them. They effectively reduced the nausea and pain, pushed aside the praying-to-die aspect, but I still wasn't clear headed for any lesser period of time than my migraines usually last. Any day I suffered a migraine was still trashed, meds or not.
My own pattern seemed to follow that of cluster headaches and certain forms of epilepsy. I'll be "in remission" for many months, and then hell.
I'm currently in a migraine cycle but my situation is such that a few hours of blindness, discomfort, and inability to mentally focus isn't a big deal.
I'm a huge fan of modern meds.
I'd be long dead in a world without them.
DeadLetterOffice
(1,352 posts)It's really helped me. I hope your son's medication works for him!