RichardN
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Okay . . . for those who have docs not familiar with CH or treatment of same.
Copy the "Cluster traits" (link on left), "Cluster Quiz" (also on left), "the kip scale" (left also) . . . take a yellow marker and mark all the traits that match your symptoms.
If you don't already have one . . . start a headache journal today, list the time, duration, pain level (use the Kip scale) and take this with you to your next doc appt.
Copy the 02 info (on the left), plus the plainboard site and others that list symptoms, treatments for CH.
And take all of this with you when you see your doc. That's what I did after a week of my wife finding this site and the day after what still ranks as the worst attack I've ever had. He wanted to up the dosage of Atenelol (sp?), which at that time wasn't even listed in the medical info as a treatment for CH. NO! "This is what I have and THIS is what I want (Verapamil, 02, Imitrex). I was loud, somewhat aggressive (to the point that the nurse had me sign a paper she had written up promising not to be loud or hostile in the future the next time I had and appt . . . her idea, not the docs). He relented on the Verapamil and 02 (4 lpm with nasal canulae . . . didn't care . . had the script, then got a higher flowrate regulator and non-rebreather mask). Within 3 weeks, had my first PF day in over a year. Due to some heart issues he (correctly) denied the Trex, and future test did show I has some artery blockage and high cholesterol . . . so Trex is out for me.
Several months later he left for another practice and on my last visit with him, he gave back all those copies of info and said, "guess we'll have to blame it (success) on the Verapamil"
Point being, if you don't have a doc that understands CH, you're going to have to educate him/her to help them help you or find another doc.
If that doesn't work, I would consider triggering an attack in his office (slam down a beer or two a few minutes before your walk in) At the very least, you won't be sitting in the waiting room for very long . . . if they're going to refuse to treat your pain, they should at least be forced to observe it and realize it's not "just" a headache.
Radical? Maybe. But they're not the ones living in fear of the next attack.
Be Safe,
PFDANs
Richard
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