Health Advice

Latest from blog

Head Lice – Help!!!

Every parent’s heart sinks when they receive the dreaded note from school warning about head lice. Don’t worry – Jane Brennan from Brennan’s Life Pharmacy in Donabate is here to to give us advice and tips. The first thing to do is to check the child’s head. You will need some tea tree conditioner, a... Read more >

Read more

Are You SunSmart?

We ask Jane Brennan from Brennan’s Life Pharmacy Donabate how to make the most of great sunny summer days whilst protecting our skin from harmful rays. Jane says “The Irish Cancer Society SunSmart program has great guidelines to keep us safe. See below for some useful tips and advice” Ways to protect your skin: Shade... Read more >

Read more

Pollen Highs & Watery Eyes

Pollen Highs & Watery Eyes… Talk to Jane Brennan, your Hay Fever Expert in Donabate Are your eyes itchy, red or watery? Is your throat scratchy? Are you sneezing? Do you have itchy ears, nose or mouth? Do you have a blocked or runny nose? Do you wake up feeling exhausted? Hay fever can cause... Read more >

Read more

Life Pharmacy Ireland – Live Better

Bringing you the best health advice for your family

NHS Choices - 'When I was sick, I knew it was a really bad one'

(11/07/2014)

Debbie was 12 years old when she first began having symptoms of migraine

“I remember being at school and feeling not at all well: headachy and groggy,” she says. “The groggy periods increased until I seemed to have a headache all day, every day. But when my mum took me to the doctor he said it was just a part of growing up.”

For the next ten years, Debbie battled with her regular headaches. She went back to the doctor several times but nothing seemed to work. “One specialist put me on tablets which made me feel sick and have hallucinations, but did nothing for the pain,” she recalls. “Another told me I had migraine and I just had to learn to live with it.”

Then Debbie got a new job in a local factory. But the conditions made her headaches much worse. The factory was very bright, with strip lights, and the machinery made a lot of noise.

Debbie’s headaches now started with a mild, toothachy pain for a day or so, which would then fade. The next week, it would come back for longer. The week afterwards, the pain would be too great for her to leave her bedroom. “It was an all-over headache, not a band, as many people describe it, or over one eye,” she says. “I felt nauseous but I wasn’t always sick. When I was sick, I knew it was a really bad one. I started having to take days off work and I got a couple of warnings. I almost lost my job, and that stress didn’t help. I tried to keep going: what else could I do?”

Then Debbie heard about the Migraine Action Association. “I got in touch with them and they sent me leaflets, so I could really educate myself about my condition,” she says. “It was incredible to realise that there were many other people like me out there. Migraine is a very isolating condition, so I started a support group. I’m still in touch with some of the people today.”

Debbie got herself referred to a specialist in nearby Birmingham. After several tests, including a CT scan, she was diagnosed with chronic daily headache, a condition that is normally associated with overuse of medication. But Debbie was an unusual case. “I hardly ever took anything,” she says.

Her specialist suggested she try a new drug, amitriptyline, which is normally used as an anti-depressant. This worked for a while, and for a few months Debbie was virtually headache-free. However, over the next two years her resistance to the drug increased until it was having little or no effect. “The headaches came back with a vengeance,” she says.

But Debbie refused to be downhearted. She began experimenting with alternative therapies and found that acupuncture brought her some relief. She now has a session every six months. She also started relaxation techniques, such as walking in the fresh air.

To her surprise, the headaches began to stop. And today, she is headache-free.

“I think a big part of dealing with migraine is thinking positive,” she says. “There were times when I thought about ending it all. But you have to keep going. I will always have this condition. It’s part of who I am. It’s not my fault and it’s not caused by anything I’ve done. It’s just there. And through support groups and the help of my specialists, I’ve learned to cope with it and accept it.”

Back to Migraine