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Migraine Symptoms: Sensitivity to light is a standard symptom of the two most prevalent types of migraine-caused headache: classic and common. The major difference between the two types is the appearance of neurological symptoms 10 to 30 minutes before a classic migraine attack. These symptoms are called an aura. The person may see flashing lights or zigzag lines, or may temporarily lose vision. Other classic symptoms include speech difficulty, weakness of an arm or leg, tingling of the face or hands, and confusion. The pain of a classic migraine headache may be described as intense, throbbing, or pounding and is felt in the forehead, temple, ear, jaw, or around the eye.
Classic migraine starts on one side of the head but may eventually spread to the other side. An attack lasts 1 to 2 pain-wracked days.
Common migraine - a term that reflects the disorder's greater occurrence in the general population - is not preceded by an aura. But some people experience a variety of vague symptoms beforehand, including mental fuzziness, mood changes, fatigue, and unusual retention of fluids. During the headache phase of a common migraine, a person may have diarrhea and increased urination, as well as nausea and vomiting. Common migraine pain can last 3 or 4 days.
Both classic and common migraine can strike as often as several times a week, or as rarely as once every few years. Both types can occur at any time. Some people, however, experience migraines at predictable times - for example, near the days of menstruation or every Saturday morning after a stressful week of work.
Forty-Five (45) Million Americans suffer from chronic headaches. What they don’t know, and the drug industry won’t tell you, is that your headaches may be caused by a simple problem; and cured with a simple solution.
Is there really a “Cure” for Migranes?
The drug industry would lead you to believe that migranes are cured, when their medication masks your symptoms. Taking medication for the temporary relief of migrane headaches is misguided because drugs are not a permanent solution. Long-term use of drugs can lead to serious side effects and while they may treat the temporary pain, they do not even address the more important underlying cause of the pain.
What is crucial to understand is that a migranes are your body's way of telling you something is wrong. The migrane headache itself is not the problem—it is simply the symptom of a problem. So if you want to cure your headaches, what you really want to do is to fix the problem that is causing your headaches. Before you can fix this underlying problem, you must first identify what is causing your headaches.
>> CLICK HERE TO LEARN WHAT MAY BE THE CAUSE OF YOUR MIGRANE HEADACHES.
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