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Doing yoga may help you suffer less from migraines alongside taking your medication, study suggests

The number of migraines reported over a three-month period fell by almost half in the study of over 100 people.

ADDING YOGA TO your regularly prescribed migraine treatment may be better than just taking the medication alone, according to a new study published today in the American Academy of Neurology medical journal.

The research suggests that yoga may help people have headaches that happen less often, don’t last as long and are less painful. 

The study led by Dr Rohit Bhatia from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences in New Delhi involved 114 people between the ages of 18 and 50 who had episodic migraines.

Participants experienced between four and 14 headaches a month, and they were randomly assigned to two groups: medication-only or yoga and the medication.

Those in the yoga group were taught a one-hour yoga practice that included breathing and relaxation exercises and postures.

They were supervised by a yoga instructor three days a week for one month.

They then practiced it at home on their own for five days a week over the next two months.

Both groups received the appropriate medication for their migraines and counselling about lifestyle choices that may help such as getting adequate sleep, eating regular meals and exercising.

Each participant kept a log about how long their headaches lasted, how severe they were and medications they took. 

While both groups reported improvements, the benefit was higher in the yoga group across headache frequency, pain intensity and how much the migraine interfered with their daily lives.

The yoga group started with an average of 9.1 headaches per month. This dropped to 4.7 headaches a month by the end of the study. 

The medication-only group reported an average of 7.7 headaches a month, dropping to just 6.8 at the end of the three months. 

Dr Bhatia said: “Migraine is one of the most common headache disorders, but only about half the people taking medication for it get real relief.

The good news is that practicing something as simple and accessible as yoga may help much more than medications alone. And all you need is a mat.

A limitation noted on the study was that people reported information about their own headaches themselves, so the results may be inconsistent. 

Furthermore, the study only lasted three months so more research would be needed to see if the benefits of yoga lasted for a longer period. 

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    Mute Harry Meany
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    May 7th 2020, 9:29 AM

    Oh the bishop of Waterford and Lismore won’t like this!!

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    Mute Clare McAfee
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    May 7th 2020, 2:30 PM

    I’ve had daily chronic intractable migraine for 18 months now. Woke up with a migraine in Oct 2018, it decided to never leave. Yoga and meditation are very helpful. Sometimes all I can manage is child’s pose, but it stretches out my neck and back. So many things feed migraine – stress and muscle tension being a huge contributing factor, so yoga can only help. The only other thing I’ve found really helpful is swimming in the sea. It’s the only time I forget I have a migraine. Probably because it’s so darn cold!

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    Mute D'oh
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    May 7th 2020, 6:33 AM

    Religion has no place, well, unless it’s yoga.

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    Mute Brendan Harlowe
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    May 7th 2020, 6:42 AM

    @D’oh: yoga is not a religion. Religious privatise of meditation used to call for yoga to stretch and relax the body, but is not a religois practise in itself

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    Mute Jesus Christ
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    May 7th 2020, 10:10 AM

    @Brendan Harlowe: yoga’s origins is very much rooted in religion, created by priests in India. (Not Christian priests) it stems from ritual sacrifice which was developed into an internalised activity.

    A number of religions lay claim to yoga techniques although it’s likely part of Hinduism or Buddhism.

    Many Sanskrit names are religious too and chakra are a spiritual belief structure. In fact Yoga is the Sanskrit word for “union with god”.

    Many yoga poses mirror religious poses still used today in some religions.

    So while modern yoga isn’t flying a religious flag, much of what happens in the yoga studio is religious in original intention.

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    Mute Paul Keane
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    May 7th 2020, 11:54 AM

    114? Not exactly a large test pool. People will take this as a comprehensive test.

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    Mute Gavin Tobin
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    May 7th 2020, 1:21 PM

    Migraine linked to newly recognised Mast Cell Activation Syndrome ICD10-D89.42 #MCAS

    http://mcas.ie/?page_id=89

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