According to a CBS News report, a study found that people that who are depressed and have migraines have smaller brains. The authors of the study were trying to find out if having both depression and migraines affected the brain. Study author Dr. Larus S. Gudmundsson from Bethesda, MD – who is a researcher at The National Institute on Aging and The Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences – said in a news release, “Our study suggests that people with both migraine and depression may represent a unique group from those with only one of these conditions.” The findings of this study were published on May 22, 2013 online at Neurology.
This is not the only study to find brain changes in those patients with migraines. A March 2013 study in Radiology reports that there is less tissue over the part of the brain that processes pain in those that suffer from migraines. Additionally, a November 2012 study in JAMA states that small lesions are more likely to be found on the brains of women who suffer from migraines.
Treatment Providing Hope in Apex, North Carolina
An upper cervical chiropractor from New York has been doing some amazing research with upright MRI’s. His research is giving hope to migraine sufferers. He has found that the flow of cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) to, from, and through the brain changes when someone has a misalignment in the upper neck area. This fluid is what lubricates the spinal cord and brain.
An obstruction happens when the first few bones of the neck become misaligned. This can cause a buildup of blood and CSF that, in turn, leads to increased intracranial pressure. This pressure can be decreased by as much as almost 29% when this misalignment is corrected by an upper cervical chiropractor, such as Dr. Jim Strunk of Apex, North Carolina. Then CSF flow can once again become normal.
These changes in blood flow and CSF may be the underlying cause of the brain changes that are being seen through the research noted above. These findings are consistent with the research of the upper cervical organization that is looking at changes, with phase contrast MRI’s, in blood flow to and from the brain in migraine patients.
Pain is not the only problem with migraine headaches. They are also damaging your brain. Call Dr. Strunk today to see if you can get some relief.