Migraine Treatment

New Migraine Treatment in Noblesville Provides Rapid Relief for Patients

Do you struggle with chronic migraines? You are not alone. Roughly 25% of households in America have at least one individual that suffers from migraines.

Migraines are severe headaches that affect the entire nervous system and often include various symptoms, like nausea, vision disturbances, light or sound sensitivity, and vertigo.

Often, persistent pain and severe accompanying symptoms escalate to a debilitating level, preventing many from working or completing daily activities.

What Are the Symptoms of Migraines?

Migraines are a debilitating form of chronic pain. People that suffer from migraines recognize the onset immediately. The lifespan of this intense pain can be broken into four phases:

Prodrome 

Occasionally, warning signs will signal a migraine attack as early as a day or two ahead of time. These signs can look like this: 

  • Food cravings
  • Neck stiffness
  • Constipation or difficulty with a bowel movement
  • Depression, euphoria, or other mood changes 
  • Increased thirst or feeling like you need to urinate
  • Repeated yawning
Aura 

Auras are a warning of sorts, also known as revocable indicators of the nervous system. They are primarily visual but may include other disruptions. The symptoms start gradually, build for several minutes, and persist for 20 minutes to an hour. Here are some examples of migraine auras:

  • Visual cues – seeing bright spots, shapes, or flashes of light
  • Temporary loss of vision
  • Tingling sensations in the leg or arm 
  • Numbness or weakness in one side of the body or the face 
  • Trouble speaking either words or whole sentences
  • Hearing music or noises 
  • Unruly jerking or wild movements
Attack

Migraine attacks last anywhere from four hours to three days if untreated, but the duration varies based on each person. Migraines might happen rarely or occur many times a month. With a migraine, you may experience:

  • Excruciating pain on one or both sides of your head
  • Ache that pulses or throbs 
  • Sensitivity to sound, light, and sometimes touch and smell 
  • Sickness and vomiting
Post-drome 

People often report feeling exhausted, bewildered, and wiped out for a w

How Does Ketamine Help Treat Migraines?

Recent evidence points to ketamine’s inhibitory effects on the NMDA receptor in the lateral habenula. The lateral habenula is a brain region primarily responsible for encoding negative rewards or anti-reward cause-and-effect relationships. Those with depression and anxiety show an overactivity of burst firing in the lateral habenula. As a non-competitive NMDA antagonist, ketamine prevents glutamate from activating the NMDA receptor.

The inhibition of the NMDA receptor may cause a build-up of free glutamate, which then activates the AMPA receptors. When surplus glutamate activates the AMPA receptor, it releases a brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) chemical. BDNF, in interaction with the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), promotes new neural growth. This new growth may reroute the brain from hyperactive areas associated with negative reward signals, providing long-term relief from migraines.

In short, ketamine blocks the neural excitation pathways likely responsible for migraine pain.

Is Ketamine Right for You?

Migraines are one of the leading causes of disability. They take entire days out of people’s lives. If you suffer from migraines, relief is out there. K Therapeutics and Wellness mental health service is revolutionizing how Central Indiana residents manage symptoms of migraines and other treatment-resistant conditions.

If you or someone you love suffers from migraines, contact us today to learn how ketamine therapy  for migraines can help you!

Start Your New Journey in Life

Contact K Therapeutics and Wellness and request your consultation today.

Request Consultation