Tom, I've been around here starting just a few months after DJ opened up. Years of reading folks' experiences plus digging around the medical literature have made it clear to me that any time you hear folks talking in absolute terms, the caution flag should go up.
It's not unusual for a treatment program to work for a time and then collapse. The whys are not known, although such an experience gives one an open door to introduce any guess/bias/maybe which explains the experience. What years of experience here suggests: use the program which works; be prepared to start looking for a new mix, should that become necessary. Blaming and cursing the darkness only blocks the way.
Re. Verap: some years ago it was common for people with rather short cycles to stay on it 100% of the time. There were no reports that this may have created a tolerance reaction + diminished effectiveness. Many folks have found it helpful to increase dosing over time--but the why is ??? (Again, the open door for your guess/bias.) But there is no evidence that it will harm you. Basically, this is a blood pressure med and many of us stay on this class of meds for decades, for BP control, with no problems. As with so much in medicine, we can raise interesting questions, whereas the answers are often lacking.
Re. Imitrex: is the problem true rebound or recurrence?
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Rebound headaches. "Rebound Headaches--A Review", Au. John S. Warner, M.D., in HEADACHE QUARTERLY, 10:3(1999). (There is some confusion on the board about the meaning of "rebound". There appears to be an emerging consensus in the medical literature to define "rebound" as a headache which is caused by the overuse of any medication used to abort a headache or relieve pain. "Recurrence" [of a headache] is being used to refer to the redevelopment of an attack when its "normal" duration is longer than the useful life of the medication which has been taken. That is, the medication effectiveness is reducing before the headache has come to an end; the pain redevelops.)
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Sumatriptan has a hard initial punch and relatively short effective life--a combination which works well for most Cluster attacks. However, some people, whose Clusters have a longer life, find that the med is wearing down even as the pain continues. One can understand how this sequence comes into one's thinking: Attack, Imitrex injection, pain continues, it's a rebound cluster which has developed from the Imitrex. In fact, this is a recurrence of the attack, not a rebound.
This is one of the reasons that several other triptans were developed having less initial punch but longer effective life. While aimed at the migraine crowd, at first, a number of cluster users have found this characteristic of value to them.
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There is emerging agreement that a true reboud is posisble but not predictable. When suspected: stop using the abortive and see what happens. If the headache pattern changes, that suggests the abortive has been the problem--then start a new one (likely different class ofmed). But absolute statements?
I've got more saved materials on this topic than any other single on around Cluster--and no final "truth".
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Sumatriptan & Rebound headaches (In Medications, Treatment and Therapies)
Dec 12th, 2009 at 9:35am There has been an increasing declaration in some of the messages here that, "Imitrex/sumatriptan causes rebound headaches."
Sometime ago the caution was, "it can cause rebound", a statement which was consistent with what is found in the medical literature.
"Imitrex causes..." is both a misstatement and--my concern in writing--it scares people away from using the most effective abortive we have. A tendency to puff up statements/claims, etc. in very common in communication but I'm urging care/caution when we are offering assistance to vulnerable folks who are seeking our help.
I've just spent a hour searching medical literature sites and it's striking just how very limited are any studies/reports/warnings about side effects with sumatriptan. I found this one definitive statement from 2003. Please note two facts: the vulnerable age and the low rate of rebound:
"Medication-Overuse Seen as Epidemic, First Management Guidelines Issued: Presented at IHC "
By Larry Schuster ROME, ITALY -- September 25, 2003 --
The prevalence was highest in respondents who were their 50s, with 5% of women fulfilling the criteria. Thirty five percent overused simple analgesics, 22% ergotics, 12.5% opioids, 2.7% triptans, and 27% overused combinations of drug classes."
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How to survive for the long haul?
1.. Trusted doc
2. a program which works for you
3. when the cycle is passed, enjoy life but don't brood about when the next cycle. What the psychologist calls "ancticpatory anxiety" messes up your emotions and does get you any control/safety.
4. At least explore: Multimedia File Viewing and Clickable Links are available for Registered Members only!! You need to

or