Kay
CH.com Newbie
Offline
I Love CH.com!
Posts: 15
Omaha, NE
Gender:
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My husband, Tim, is 47 and has had CH since late teens, early 20's. He's episodic and only cycles every 3 years or so with no consistency when they start (they've started in Jan, Oct, March, Aug... you name it). First doc to mention CH was in '95 but given ineffective meds. Even with this diagnosis, other doc's have tried to write it off as sinus headaches or migraines.
I bless the day I found this website back in 2001!! When Tim went by himself to the doc when he started his 2001 cycle, he was give some Imitrex. Nothing else. He actually had a full-blown CH in the doc's office. Loaded with all the knowledge gathered from the trials and errors of all of you, I marched back to the office asking why he wasn't trying other preventatives. I asked why he didn't offer prednisone, and he said "I've had limited success with it". I insisted we try and he wrote a script. Within the very first dose Tim felt them working. Within 48-72 hours, he was PH. He had to stay on it for about 7-10 days and the cycle was completely aborted and he was nearly PF for the duration.
The lesson learned was 2-fold. First, we must all be our own health advocate. Even if the docs really care, with the rariety of this and heavy workloads, they likely don't know enough to give adequate care. Second, as a supporter, we need to be the advocate for our spouse or partner. Allowing Tim to go to the doc appointment by himself (I offered but he said no) was a big mistake. He was in the middle of a full-blown cycle, and his head certainly was working properly, especially given then he had one right in the office. He was in no condition to hold a productive conversation and debate with the doc about alterative meds or course of treatment.
Thankfully a short cycle of predisone continues to work for Tim. It stopped his 2005 cycle and now 4 days into a new cycle, it's working again. Last night was completely PH and he got a full 8 hours sleep!!!!
If I hadn't found this site to arm us with this powerful information, I know he'd be suffering terribly. Thank you, thank you, thank you!!
Now that I've got all that off my chest, I have a question. Years ago a pharmacist who had CH told Tim that as you grow older, the attacks get milder and eventually you grow out of them. I think Tim has always held on to that believe and every cycle and year that passes he feels gets him closer to these going away for good.
I've not read anything that supports this idea. If anything, I've seen many posting about things getting worse (e.g. moving from episodic to chronic). Does anyone know of any research to prove/disprove or, better yet, any personal experience that would prove or disprove this?
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