Thunderclap headache is often referred to as the worst headache of your life. Learn about diagnosis, symptoms, and what to do if you have on
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Thunderclap headache is often referred to as the worst headache of your life. Learn about diagnosis, symptoms, and what to do if you have on
Thunderclap headache is often referred to as the worst headache of your life. Learn about diagnosis, symptoms and what to do if you have one
Thunderclap headache, as the name suggests it strikes suddenly like a "clap of thunder". The thunderclap pain does not get severe gradually, it gets intense and very painful within a minute and lasts for around 5 minutes.
Thunderclap headache, as the name suggests it strikes suddenly like a “clap of thunder”.
Migraine Relief: Peppermint Oil and Lavender Oil 101
Migraine Relief: Peppermint Oil and Lavender Oil 101
You’ll do just about anything to get rid of either a thunderclap headache or for migraine relief if you have ever experienced one of these debilitating headaches first hand. One of the leading factors people consider in headache remedies as of late is the desire to find an organic option to add to their medicine cabinet without breaking the piggy bank. In addition, most of us prefer not to walk…
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Thunderclap Headache: Cause, Symptoms, And Treatments
What is a thunderclap headache?
Thunderclap headaches are classified as headaches that have a severe and sudden onset. These headaches take seconds to minutes to reach its maximum intensity, with pain being described as excruciating and attention grabbing. Its quick and powerful onset lends to its name Thunderclap Headache.
What causes thunderclap headaches?
Thunderclap Headaches are uncommon,…
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January 5th 2012
January 5th 2012 I was at my usual appointment with my doctor. Before I got sick I have always been different from most people, I have Aspergers which is a different form of autism and I have Tourettes. The simplest way to explain to people is that autism is on a spectrum on how it affect the individual. Some people are affected physically, which is the most severe type of autism then there are people like me who look like everyone else but they do not perceive basic communication skills like most people should. There is a lot could say on this matter but I will come back to this on a later time.
Towards the last couple minutes of our session I got this intense instant strike of pain on the left side of my head. I have done a lot of research online and this is actually known as a thunderclap headache. At first I did not think much of it because I was use to having horrible migraines (at the time I kept telling the doctor who I was seeing my head hurts too much maybe I have migraine problems) so I thought to myself while my doctor was talking maybe this is just another bad one. So that day I tried to do my school work, went to the gym but it just did not go away. By the evening I could not take it, I was in bed with a cold cloth on my eyes in a dark room. When my husband came home he thought my head was hurting ( because before this had occurred my head ALWAYS hurt) so he did not think anything of it.
January 6th 2012 at 4am I woke up and could not go back to sleep because of the pain, I felt so sick. I decided to go to the restroom then I then I starting to throw up because the pain was so numbing it made me sick. I kept throwing up until 630am. That is when my husband came in and started to think maybe something was wrong with me. My husband is a lawyer at a very large law firm so he was in a hurry to get to work for this big filing for the court. He went ahead and called his dad for me to see if he could take me to the ER.
I will always remember January 6, 2012. It's funny. When I first got out of the hosptial a good friend of my husband's family (The Jay's) both doctors, called to see how I was doing. I had met them that summer at my father in law's wedding. Dr. Jay's wife told me " You may not feel well for a while but when you do, you need to live your life as normal as you can." That is the best advice someone has ever given me. Yet at the moment she gave it to me I had no idea wha she meant, until 6 months later when I was on a verge of a mental break down did understand what she meant....thank you Dr. Jay :]