Hey Slippa,
Welcome to CH.com. You've come to the right place... Please believe us we know what you're going through and the good news is it doesn't need to be that way.
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What were you prescribed for your cluster headaches?
The standards of care recommended treatments for cluster headache start with oxygen therapy and imitrex as abortives that are used to stop a headache that's already started.
If used early and properly, at a flow rate of 25 liters/minute with a non-rebreathing mask, oxygen therapy is capable of aborting a cluster headache in an average of 7 minutes. Imitrex (sumatriptan succinate) is also effective as an abortive.
Imitrex comes in three forms, subcutaneous injection (the fastest abort 5 to 10 minutes), nasal spray (next fastest abort 10 to 20 minutes, and tablets (the slowest form at 25 to 40 minutes for an abort).
You'll need medical insurance for imitrex as the injections run $100 a pop retail with a prescription... Even then most insurance companies will only cover 9 a month...
Prednisone is a transitional preventative typically prescribed in a taper lasting 10 days to two weeks. It should be accompanied by verapamil, a longer term preventative that will take 10 days to two weeks to reach optimum effectiveness as a preventative... Just about the time the prednisone taper runs out.
Verapamil is also a heart medication so you should be given an EKG to establish a baseline and a followup EKG a few weeks after starting it.. You should also have periodic EKGs every 3 months.
See the following link on a study done by Dr. Peter Goadsby, M.D. titled:
"Electrocardiographic abnormalities in patients with cluster headache on verapamil therapy"
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Accordingly, a neurologist who is experienced in treating patients with cluster headache should be familiar with the standards of care recommended treatments and have written you prescriptions for oxygen therapy, imitrex, prednisone and verapamil per the chart below.
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If you haven't had these medications prescribed, print out a copy of the following link and take it to your neurologist.
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When you next see your PCP or neurologist, be sure to ask for a lab test of your 25-Hydroxyvitamin D, a.k.a., 25(OH)D. This is the serum level metabolite of vitamin D3 that's used to measure its status... The odds are you are vitamin D3 deficient and that deficiency is contributing to the frequency, severity and duration of your CH.
Expect some of the oldtimers to chime in on how to handle your cluster headaches at home and in the work environment.
Take care and hang in there...
V/R, Batch