Marie,
Just because your National Health Service may be screwed up as Hogan's Goat, it doesn't mean you can't come to an appointment armed with more facts about your disorder than the physician you see. It also helps to know ahead of time how patients suffering from this disorder should be properly treated according to the experts.
Read the following link and print a copy to take along to your next appointment. It is one of the best guidelines and standards of care in treating our disorder.
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Here you'll find the EFNS guidelines on the treatment of cluster headache and other trigeminal-autonomic cephalalgias. The neurologists on the European Federation of Neurological Societies (EFNS) task force who generated these recommendations number among the brightest minds in the field of neurology and all have many years in a clinical environment treating patients who suffer from this terribly painful disorder.
If the meds your physician prescribes are not on the EFNS list, ask how many cluster headache sufferers he's treated successfully and don't be afraid to challenge the him with questions why he's not prescribing in accordance with the accepted standards of care for cluster headache... After all, he feels no pain if he prescribes medications that are ineffective for CH...
In the absence of another underlying or co-morbid condition, the mainstream starting point and three-pronged strategy for treating CH usually includes a prescription for a 10 day to two-week prednisone taper. Prednisone is a very effective preventative, but is only prescribed for short periods as it has some onerous side effects if taken too long.
There should be a second preventative prescribed along with the prednisone taper such as verapamil. It can take a week to ten days for verapamil to build up to therapeutic levels and it is usually started at a low dose with increases in dosage until it becomes effective.
Finally there should be a prescription for oxygen therapy at a flow rate of 12 to 15 liters/minute as an acute treatment to stop the terrible pain. Oxygen therapy is very safe, very effective and it's the least costly abortive abortive available to us. Many neurologists will also prescribe a "Bail-out" or escape abortive from the triptan family to be taken if the oxygen therapy is unable to stop the pain.
You might want to give the folks at OUCH-UK a call on their Helpline. They know how to swindle oxygen therapy out of your National Health Service faster than most. Their website is at:
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and their Helpline is 0 1646 651 979. Call them asap.
Take care and cheers... Things will get better.
V/R, Batch