Bob Johnson
CH.com Alumnus
 
Offline

"Only the educated are free." -Epictetus
Posts: 5965
Kennett Square, PA (USA)
Gender:
|
EVAN:
Your last comment captures the dilemma of: A. how to evaluate changes in our cluster situation, B. the meaning of relationships—if any—between 2 or more events. Here, talking about changes in the use, frequency, dose and the effect of adding a second med or treatment OR some combination of all these variables.
A major player in this picture is our mind’s operations. We are motivated to explain/understand important events. It’s ease to quickly link two or more events and to assume we have a correct explanation for our concern. The next step: hold onto the explanation and lose sight of how weak our evidence often is.
Changing important beliefs is hard—because they are important to us—and this, most especially, when the data are soft, e.g., politics & religion.
Simply put, in your situation, making meds changes, dosing, frequency, etc. introduces more variables than can be evualted re.the end results.
Confounding your issue: is the issue recurrence of an attack or a rebound attack? Or, as you suggest, the ending of a cycle? Add, the absence of evidence that Verapamil causes rebound and the mixed evidence that Imitrex consistently causes rebound. --------- (First posted a few years ago.) 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.) ---------------------------------- 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.
|