Quote:Lizzie2 wrote on Aug 15th, 2008 at 4:34pm: It is something to be considered only after absolutely all other alternatives have failed.
Carrie
Hello Carrie,
Could I ask which other Alternatives you yourself tried.
Regards.
CArl...
Are you asking out of curiosity or out of knowledge that I haven't tried alternatives in that sense?

When I initially wrote that statement, I meant alternatives in the general sense of the word, not specific to the "alternatives" used here. But the following is my history of things tried, in brief! (haha...)
No, I haven't tried shrooms or seeds. I cannot risk it with my job. I take no offense and fully support those that choose those methods. Shrooms, I couldn't do anyway, as I have a history of having psychotic reactions to a couple of different meds, and I would fear even a small dose could send my apparently unstable brain into some alternate world permanently.

Seeds on the other hand - still not completely out of the picture, but again, I truly cannot risk my career. I could lose my license. The only other factor aside from fear of loss of license (which would, definitely, be bad...) would be the fact that I absolutely cannot detox off some of the other medications I am on, and I have never found definitive answers on whether or not seeds are safe when combined with my other meds, such as methotrexate, GI meds, and others.
But all that aside, in terms of the conventional medical treatments I have tried, they include the following: inpatient IV (and some of these outpatient as well) infusions of DHE, reglan, thorazine, steroids, magnesium, droperidol, fluids, lidocaine, depacon, benadryl, haldol, propofol and some other things that I cannot recall off the top of my head.
Keeping in mind that I have both a chronic migraine (New Daily Persistent Headache) and chronic CH, I've tried zyprexa, thorazine, lithium, verapamil, depakote, lamictal, lyrica, neurontin, topamax, cymbalta, elavil, pamelor (nortriptyline), geodon, inderal, zonegran, prozac, parnate, methergine, melatonin, magnesium, riboflavin, gabitril, indomethacin, co-enzyme Q10, Kudzu, mexiletine all with intention to prevent.
For abortives, I have tried imitrex injections, maxalt, frova, amerge, zomig tabs and NS, relpax, DHE injections, migranal NS, thorazine, zyprexa, geodon, compazine, phenergen, multiple steroid tapers, red bull.
In addition to all that, I have tried Botox 3 times, have had so many nerve injections that I've lost count, tried physical therapy several times, accupuncture twice, chiropractor, massage therapy, went to a TMJ specialist, went to a dietician, sinus surgery, and other things I cannot remember quickly.
For CH alone - I will say that I found varying degrees of relief with some of that. I cannot tolerate some of it that did help - I can't take imitrex injections because of my heart rate, couldn't tolerate lithium even below therapeutic levels in the blood although did have some success with it combined with verapamil, and the steroids worked every time to give me some reduced hits or PF time temporarily, but I cannot receive them any longer due to the bone disease avascular necrosis.
I remain on verapamil at a total of 480mg/day (120mg 4x/day), which doesn't do a whole lot - but seems to add some benefit to reducing the number of hits I have a day, so I have not weaned off that yet since the stimulator, although that is one of the meds I plan to get off. I use Frova and Amerge in a preventive sense, but only up to 4 days a week total, and not taking either one much at the moment since the stimulator. I use O2, but I must admit I rely on the triptans more heavily because it made my life easier to prevent the attacks than to chase them down with O2 once they started. O2 does work well for me, though, most of the time, and I certainly used it on days where I wasn't using triptans to prevent. Some of the things on my list worked for awhile then failed or I just didn't tolerate well for some reason. Kudzu worked in the first 8 days I was on it, then had emergency surgery for a hemorrhage and the hematologist told me I had to stop taking it. I later tried Kudzu again by my own choice and was noticing some benefit before I realized that it can kill rats when combined with methotrexate, so that is not a recommended combination. Oh and red bull works wonders as an abortive for me, although with my heart I tend to limit my use of red bull to once or twice a day.
I think you get the picture... There is very little I have not tried, and the things I have tried, I have given a good and fair trial of - several months on each med as long as the side effects weren't too great. Went up to high doses on all of them for as long as I could tolerate.
3 years ago, I went for a consult on the stimulator, and was told at the time that it wasn't a good option for me due to my size (being thin) and where the attacks occurred (mostly front and side of the head/face). 3 years later, I walked into a routine appointment with my neurologist and 2 specialists from England happened to be visiting - one of them knows Mike P. well and knows everything to know about the stimulator. They pointed to the studies regarding occipital nerve stimulation and CH, and said it would be my best bet with both headache types at this point, and would get me off some of the meds I'm on. So I went back to the same neurosurgeon, and he said lots had changed, and he was willing to try it - along with the addition of the supraorbital lead on the bad side. (My right...) I did the trial in January, and had greater than 50% reduction of pain severity and attack numbers, which was enough to go ahead with the permanent procedure. I had the permanent implant in May, and I am at the point where I don't even have CH hits every day, and the ones I have only last 30 minutes now instead of 45-90, and don't seem to be as severe. The chronic migraine pain has been reduced, although the clusters have seen the greater benefit from this procedure, between my 2 headache types. If it weren't for the fact that I am currently battling the infection from hell on the back of my neck, I would have weaned even further off my meds. I'm currently working on one med in particular that I've been on for 2.5 years, and then will wean off verapamil after that, as well as a couple of GI meds I'm on - once I get the other meds off. It is very exciting to be at this point in my life. Although the thought of potentially losing the stimulator to the infection is a bit daunting, but I could get it back after waiting a period of 3 months. So all will not be lost, even if the infection comes out the winner in this battle we are having.
I haven't tried the "alternatives" so to speak, for the reasons I stated above. Someday, when I'm no longer working as a nurse or in medicine, then I may give more thought to trying the seeds. And this is only if the CH's become a problem again, or if the seeds are proven to help with migraine as well as CH, as some postulate may be a possibility. I will not ever be trying the shrooms, for the reasons I outlined above. So I didn't exhaust every single possibility available, but I tried all of the medical therapies offered to me until there were none left to try, and so here I am. I do not regret having chosen to get the stimulator, even in spite of how bad the skin infection is (it is, afterall, localised to the skin and not a systemic infection!), and even if the stimulator must come out and then I would have to go through everything all over again in a few months' time.
Sorry for the lengthy response. Just felt I had to justify it.... It's been a long time since I have stated what I tried in that form. I still think the stimulator is not a first line treatment, but one to go to after all the alternatives (both medical and "alternative") have been looked at, within the realm of possibility. When I initially wrote alternatives, I meant that in a general sense really - not in the sense of the alternative therapies only.
So that's that. Hope it is helpful to someone out there!

PF wishes,
Carrie

**Edited to fix the 4 days a week total preventing with Frova or Amerge.