1. The verap dose is rather low for CH--unless your doc has told you of his intention to increase over time. It will, in any case, take a couple of weeks to get full benefit and then some dosing adjustment is not uncommon. You will continue to use it until the cycle has stopped. Since there is no test for when this has happened, you doc can guide you in stopping the verap. a few weeks after your last attack.
2. Pain in the teeth is common because your teeth share a nerve pathway which is involved in th CH. Don't let you your dentist talk you into action unless, i.e., x-ray shows an infection in a tooth, etc. Need to stop the CH cycle before dental decisions can be made.
3. CH evolves with time in terms of location and quality and degree of pain. No patterns. It may take months, even years before a stable pattern emerges. Nothing to be concerned about as this variation occurs.
Strongly sugggest you start learning! It's the bests prevention for anxiety/fear. Explore the buttons, left, the many links embedded. OUCH site is well organized for exploration. I'd suggest one of the books, below, and the links listing current therapies. These lists give you a nice tool to guide discussions with your doc as well as informing you.
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MANAGEMENT OF HEADACHE AND HEADACHE MEDICATIONS, 2nd ed. Lawrence D. Robbins, M.D.; pub. by Springer. $50 at Amazon.Com. It covers all types of headache and is primarily focused on medications. While the two chapters on CH total 42-pages, the actual relevant material is longer because of multiple references to material in chapters on migraine, reflecting the overlap in drugs used to treat. I'd suggest reading the chapters on migraine for three reasons: he makes references to CH & medications which are not in the index; there are "clinical pearls" about how to approach the treatment of headache; and, you gain better perspective on the nature of headache, in general, and the complexities of treatment (which need to be considered when we create expectations about what is possible). Finally, women will appreciate & benefit from his running information on hormones/menstrual cycles as they affect headache. Chapter on headache following head trauma, also. Obviously, I'm impressed with Robbins' work (even if the book needs the touch of a good editor!) (Somewhat longer review/content statement at 3/22/00, "Good book....")
HEADACHE HELP, Revised edition, 2000; Lawrence Robbins, M.D., Houghton Mifflin, $15. Written for a nonprofessional audience, it contains almost all the material in the preceding volume but it's much easier reading. Highly recommended.
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Here is a link to read and print and take to your doctor. It describes preventive, transitional, abortive and surgical treatments for CH. Written by one of the better headache docs in the U.S. (2002)
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Michigan Headache & Neurological Institute for another list of treatments and other articles:
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