Guiseppi wrote on Aug 4th, 2010 at 2:46pm:32 years with the damned things and the good news is they can be managed. My best success has come with a 2 pronged approach:
1: A good prevent med. Thats's one you take daily to reduce the number and intensity of your hits. Verapamil is the most common first line prevent, but at doses higher then many docs are comfy with, some go as high as 960mg a day to get relief. I use lithium at 1200 mg a day, blocks 60-70% of my attacks when I'm not in high cycle. Topomax also has a loyal following. Takes some trial and error to find what works best for you but well worth the effort.
2: An abortive, the attack starts, now what? You've already discovered OTC's are waste of time, I and others will warn you, so are narcotic pain meds. Absent rendering yourself unconcious with them they won't touch the pain.
Oxygen should be your first line abortive. I can go from oh sh%$ an attack is starting to pain free in 6-8 minutes. Beats the hell outta the old 90 minute rides I used to take. Read the oxygen info link on the left as it must be used correctly, or it won't work. The key points are a Non Re Breather Mask, at a high flow of at LEAST 15 LPM, and get on it at the first sign of an attack.
If the neuro won't give you oxygen, he is uneducated and out of date with CH and you must either convince him to give it to you or dump him. If you stay with a neuro who won't give you oxygen you accept 90 minute hits. We call that insanity!

Imitrex injectables are pricey but just as effective as 02 for me, I use them when I get caught away from my oxygen. Imitrex nasal sprays work for many, the pills tend to take too long to get absorbed to be of much benefit to us.
Energy drinks, sounds hokey, but try chugging one at the onset of an attack. I prefer sugar free red bull for the taste, but any containing the combo of caffeine and taurine will do the trick. Many can abort or at least really reduce an attack with those.
You suffer from a rare malady...congratulations on your luck!

What this means is you MUST educate yourself and be your own best advocate. Sitting down in front of your doc and saying "fix me" is a recipe for years of severe pain.
There are "alternative" methods of dealing with CH you may want to investigate at clusterbusters.com
Welcome to the board, we understand, and want to help you.
Joe
Thanks for the info. I am not to keen on narcotic painkillers. Aside from making me nauseated, I would like to be able to function in my daily life and they usually render me unable to. Personally I don't see the value in solving a debilitating problem with a debilitating solution. Nor am I a huge fan of relying on a short term solution for a long term problem. I'm looking over the oxygen info tab now...but I'm going to wait until my head doesn't hurt to do a thorough read.
I'll check out Clusterbusters when I get home, assuming that some of the 'alternative' things there are things I probably don't want to view at work.
I'm interested in oxygen primarily because people speak so highly of it, and I'm not putting anything into my body that isn't already there. Is this something that has to be prescribed? Is it expensive? Do you know if insurance companies cover this by chance? Unfortunately my finances are tight. I am fighting just to get my health insurance co to cover my inexpensive acid reflux medication.
I can't take Lithium, as I already take an anti-depressant and mood stabilizer that is successful and don't want to mess with it. I'd really like to find treatment that wont cost me wellbeing in any other aspect of my life. I really hope that is possible. On the other hand, I'm willing to try anything at some points. Also I read that SSRI's can help, but those make me very mentally unstable and make me feel suicidal so I can't just switch my anti-depressant to an SSRI and kill two birds with one stone. I wish it were that easy.
I feel like if I come in armed with as much knowledge as I can, my neuro might take me a little more seriously. The problem is, my head hurts too damn much most of the time to concentrate on a meager Google search. So I apologize if I ask too many questions. Also, I did this with my primary care doctor. I came in with printed info, a headache diary, and told her right off what I thougth it was. She just agreed and told me to take Tylenol, like previously stated. I half think that she wouldn't have come to the conclusion herself since it's so rare if I hadn't handed it to her. I'll happily hand a treatment plan over to my neuro if he'll sign off on it, I just don't know what it should be yet. Being my own doctor makes me a tad nervous.