Hi Mjedwards,
Greetings from a fellow supporter. I haven't read your whole thread so my apologies if I have written something below that doesn't apply.
Maz is giving you good advice
Mjedwards409 wrote on Jul 28th, 2014 at 7:32am:She starts a new job this week as a teacher so she absolutely cannot afford a hit at work that fails to be aborted. Do you think it's wise to get a refill of the pred taper while she gets the D3 and all into her system? Obviously this is not a long term solution, but her first taper was only 7 days which is fairly short, so maybe a second short cycle would give her some temp relief while she D3 loaded?
That is a tricky situation. I can't advise you on the meds, but I can tell you that my husband - who has been having CH for about 4 years - has had the pattern of attacks in the evening and at night. Daytime attacks have been very very rare.
Mjedwards409 wrote on Jul 28th, 2014 at 7:32am:2) Batch's original D3 regimen called for 400mg Magnesium. However, since we bought the Magnesium Citrate it comes in 250mg tablets. Would the single 250mg Magnesium Cit. be enough considering it absorbs much better than Oxide?
If she is taking a multi, check how much magnesium is in it. I would do the full 400.
Mjedwards409 wrote on Jul 28th, 2014 at 7:32am:Since it looks like these neuros may stick to their guns on the "women can't get CH" thing
Sometimes you have to educate your doctor. Print and highlight:
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Quote:The male to female ratio varies between 2.5:1 and 3.5:1.4 14 Patients typically start to develop the attacks in their third to fifth decade, although patients as young as 4 years and as old as 96 years can be affected.
Emphasize the CH-specific symptoms that she has: Multimedia File Viewing and Clickable Links are available for Registered Members only!! You need to

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Make sure they have ruled out other underlying causes - if they don't think it's CH, what are they saying it is? Other causes of pain like that can be even more serious

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Mjedwards409 wrote on Jul 28th, 2014 at 7:32am: is it worth just getting an O2 tank through other means than medical?
I walked into our family doctor's office determined to get an O2 prescription and I was successful. It's important to speak in a language they understand. Your wife needs to present the problem: "I will lose my job if I can't get the pain under control. I can't sleep and I'm terrified of the attacks". And then present the solution: "could we at least do a trial period to see if the O2 helps?". The indirect message that you
don't say is: "it's your fault if I lose my job due to lack of appropriate diagnosis/treatment". Speak for your wife if she can't advocate for herself this way.
Having seen how O2 helps my husband, with no side effects, I would get welder's O2 if I had to. Especially with the nighttime attacks, it gets him some sleep (but the attacks still exhaust him). If you're serious about doing this first read this whole page carefully:
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and here is how one person did the welding O2 thing:
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Good luck. I'm posting in a thread in the Supporter's Corner part of the forum - it can be helpful to take some time to make it "all about me". I know what you're going through - dh can barely cope right now and I've been desperately running around trying to organize things for him. We are constantly cancelling things and it's been hard on both of us.