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#Migraine Drugs Market
mitinosh · 1 year
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cmisushil · 2 years
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There are several types of medications available for migraine pain. The first category includes over-the-counter (OTC) medications such as caffeine, acetaminophen, and triptans. These medications work by inhibiting the transmission of pain signals from the nerves to the brain. Some of these drugs are effective for relieving the pain and preventing recurrence, while others are ineffective for relieving migraine pain altogether.
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navabharatlive · 2 years
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The global migraine drugs market is predicted to grow at a 5.9% CAGR between the forecast period, states the new Market Research Future (MRFR) report. Migraines, simply put, are severe, painful, and recurring headaches, which can be accompanied or preceded by sensory warning symptoms and other signs. Its causes are not yet known but triggers that may set of migraine include hormonal changes in women, emotional triggers such as stress, depression, anxiety, or excitement, physical causes
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anannyanextmsc · 4 months
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Navigating the Migraine Maze: Exploring the Dynamic Migraine Drugs Market!!
According to Next Move Strategy Consulting, the global Migraine Drugs Market size is predicted to reach $ 2  billion by 2030, with a CAGR of 3% from 2024-2030.
The recurrent headaches can last up to some hours or days, with intensity varying from moderate to severe. Migraine has no permanent cure, but migraine drugs can be used to reduce and prevent migraines.
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starlightseraph · 4 months
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house md will always be remebered as the most insane thing ever broadcast because of how unabashedly feral everyone involved was.
a short collection of things that happen on the show, just off the top of my head, not even scratching the surface:
- house shoots a random dead body in the morgue and then sticks him in an mri machine, which pulls the bullet out of the dead guy’s head and destroys the machine, costing the hospital millions
- foreman gets bitten by a person with rabies
- chase kills an african dictator
- cameron steals drugs from a patient after possibly getting hiv from said patient
- house induces a migraine and then takes a drug made by his arch nemesis (who he’s been stalking for 25 years) to get the drug taken off the market. he then takes lsd (in the hospital, in the middle of a case) to cure the migraine.
- chase goes into anaphylaxis after doing body shots
- house stops an elevator so he can perform a cavity (vaginal) search on a teenage heart transplant patient who’s in cardiorespiratory arrest
- they give a neurosurgeon mushrooms to cure his food poisoning, then they stick him in an operating room. the neurosurgeon strips in front of a health board assessor.
- kutner dies for gay marriage
- house sets an autopsy room on fire while trying to juggle flaming bottles
- house gets recruited by the cia
- taub gets held at gun point after diagnosing a stripper with skin cancer
- in almost every single episode, the team breaks into multiple houses
- house fakes terminal brain cancer so he can get drugs implanted directly into the pleasure centre of his brain
- house cons us immigration to get his fake wife a green card. he also uses his fake wife’s ukrainian food truck to spy on people
- house tries to get wilson, his closet case boybestfriend, into bed every few episodes. every other sentence out of house’s mouth is about wanting to rail wilson.
- taub has a kid with his ex-wife, after they divorce, at the same time he has a kid with his 25 yo side piece. the kids’ names are sophie and sophia.
- house and wilson have a bet on who can hide a chicken in the hospital the longest without anyone finding out
- house tries to kill himself like 6 times and always fails (insulin shock, overdoses, electrocution, jumping off a building, cutting, etc)
- house fakes his death to get out of a prison sentence after violating his parole so he can live out his bi love story with his gay best friend who has 5 months to live
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kajalfw · 11 months
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https://justnock.com/read-blog/41192_global-migraine-drugs-market-size-overview-key-players-and-forecast-2028.html
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ayurmedia · 2 years
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mitinosh · 1 year
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Anti-Migraine Drugs Market Analysis, Status and Global Outlook 2022-2029
Anti-Migraine Drugs Market Overview
The Research report on Anti-Migraine Drugs contains all relevant information. By providing its clients with accurate data, it provides the market outlook and aids in the making of crucial decisions. The market size, share, dynamics, and forecast for major segments and sub-segments are provided in this report, which combines primary and secondary research. This market research study keeps track of all the latest advancements and changes in the industry. It gives the data regarding the obstacles while establishing the business and guides to overcome the upcoming challenges and obstacles.
Get a Sample copy of the report:
https://pharmaresearchconsulting.com/reports/anti-migraine-drugs-market-global-growth-trends-and-forecast-2022-2029-by-type-triptans-ergots-by-application-by-nature-men-women-by-form-by-end-use-by-regions
Get in Touch with Us: - Phone No.+1 (704) 266-3234
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renlyslittlerose · 3 months
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Have had an awful migraine all day, but took some drugs and put on my sunglasses to go to a pop up antique market with my mum.
So I'm wandering around the indoor space, sunglasses still on, stoned out of my fucking mind, barely able to make sense of where my head is in relation to the rest of my body, when I hearthe Imperial March playing faintly in the background. This goes on for five or so minutes before I finally decide to potentially out myself as being entirely too obsessed with Darth Vader (even tho everyone already knows), and I turn to my mother and ask: "Have I reached a new level of delrium, or do you also hear the Imperial March playing?"
Thankfully, she nodded and then pointed to a cheap plastic Vader alarm clock. But for a moment I really did think my brain had finally fried itself so badly that I'd be cursed to hear Vader’s little marching song on repeat until death, or I suffered another debilitating migraine. I'm sure there are worse songs I could be stuck with, but I'd really rather not having a military march playing in my head at all times
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what if some common medicine for humans was deadly poison for yeerks? like if SSRIs make them explode/discombobulate. is that anything
I don't know too much about medicine, but I'd wager there would have to be some human medications that are poisonous to Yeerks. It would be weird if there weren't - I mean, they're allergic to freaking instant maple and ginger oatmeal! With that in mind, I think it makes perfect sense other things could mess with Yeerks too.
Now, keep in mind I'm not a doctor, I'm only a nerd, so I'm probably missing entire classes of medications that might work. However, if I had to guess which drugs would be most likely to screw with Yeerks, I'd go with things that affect the brain one way or another. It could be something straightforward like SSRIs or sleep medications, but it doesn't have to be. Maybe a host who has to take Benadryl for their allergies or is prescribed Tylenol #3 after a dental procedure finds the Yeerk reacts poorly to those medications. Maybe anti-migraine medication like Fioricet could do something to Yeerks - it's got three different things that affect the brain in different ways, including Caffeine. Maybe a large enough dose of Caffeine is enough to screw with Yeerks, and they avoid drinks and medications with Caffeine as a result.
One thing I am almost certain would mess with Yeerks, though most people don't think of it as a medicine, is alcohol. Alcohol is technically a drug, and it has all sorts of effects on the brain. Other recreational drugs may also have an effect, and we even have one case in the books to look at - Edriss 562 is implied to have been exposed to cocaine, and she certainly deviated from her mission quite a bit afterwards. Maybe there's something in that field which can affect Yeerks?
However, you could also look at things which don't affect the brain. It could be that an anti-parasitic drug might work against Yeerks, although getting the dosage right by accident would be weird. It could be something that doesn't even go in the body, like sunscreen around the ear that gets on the Yeerk as they enter/exit and screws with them.
However, no matter which drugs the Yeerks find they have trouble with, it's almost certain they would find out before the Animorphs enter the war. The Yeerk invasion of Earth is 4 to 5 years old by the time Jake et al walk home through the construction site - plenty of time to figure out which drugs are bad for Yeerks and find ways to limit their hosts' exposure to said drugs. If you're looking for a medication which would affect the Yeerks and happen during the time the Animorphs are fighting the Yeerks, then my best guesses would be either 1. A drug that builds up in or degrades Yeerk tissues over time, or 2. A new drug that just hit the market, sorta like how the oatmeal incident occurred.
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tawklinshii2 · 3 months
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Tma poem #1
Tma episode Angler Fish
(I admit this is not my best poem. I could have put more effort into it, but I tried my best. I am not a poet. But I like to write it. Even if all are not good. I am going to write the 2nd one tomorrow. This one was hard to write.)
It could have certainly been a drugging. Simply just a deceiving of the mind, many things could have been possible. Do drugs cause hallucinations? Ones that predict the future?Drugs don’t predict the future, that is ludicrous. Drugs don’t make hallucinations after they wear off. It was in the now. The moment was in the present. Or rather the past, but in the moment present. The present is in the moment, that moment was, for Mr. Watts, his present. When he smoked that Marlborough cigarette, and was asked “Can I have a cigarette?” That was his present.
Alcohol can’t cause this either. If you exclude migraines and sickness. A gatorade can fix that. Gatorades can’t fix seeing a man floating above the ground before folding in half and disappearing. And gatorades can fix a lot of things. Gatorades cannot fix six missing people near the alley Mr. Watts described at the Old Fish-market Close.
Imagining the terror in that present moment. Mr. Watt’s moment. His past-present moment. But his moment. It isn’t really something anyone can be afraid of. Paranormal is the unexplained, and the unimaginable. Humans are afraid of the unknown, it's why we went to space. But sometimes humans don’t want to know. Or just don’t have enough evidence. That's it. It's the latter. Not enough evidence. It goes, it’s story, it’s file, it’s moment, in the discredited section, like most of these will go. In the mess that is an archive.
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kajalfw · 11 months
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https://rollbol.com/blogs/1647634/Global-Migraine-Drugs-Market-Size-Overview-Key-Players-and-Forecast
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headpainmigraine · 11 months
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Migraine isn’t a Headache Part Five: make it go away
I wanted to put something about getting diagnosed before I started to address medication, but the spoons to put my diagnosis journey together down on paper are much more than this section, so I’m skipping it until later.
(We’re out of Migraine Awareness Month now, but we are getting into Disability Pride Month, and chronic migraine is a disability, so!)
Treatment for Migraine can be divided into ACUTE and PREVENTATIVE
(and within that, can be divided into ‘medical’ and ‘complimentary’)
Acute treatment includes medication that treats the pain when you’re starting or having a migraine, like triptans, and methods you use to handle the pain, like cold packs
Preventative treatment aims to stop the migraine happening, so that you don’t need to use acute treatments.
Up until very recently (2021) there were no preventative treatments for migraine that were made specifically for migraine (until 2021)
(2021)
(That was three years ago.)
(Yeah)
Every other medication prescribed had originally been designed for something else.
As a result, you’ll find that a lot of suggested migraine preventative treatments are drugs used to treat things like high blood pressure, seizures and mental health issues like depression and psychosis – dosage makes all the difference.
This isn’t because they believe the cause of your migraine to be high blood pressure, or mental illness, but because the drugs also work to mitigate migraines – I’m only highlighting that because I’ve seen it suggested that when a doctor prescribes an antidepressant for migraines, it’s because they’re treating depression – this isn’t true.
Even botox was first used in beauty treatments before they discovered that women who had it also experienced a reduction in their migraines.
There have been no medications made specifically for migraine until the last couple of years, which is a crazy state of affairs.
And, even now, the meds that are coming out for migraine (CGRP mAb injections -nabs and -gepants) aren’t widely available, and not at all in some countries (India, for example). We don’t yet have access to the exciting new -gepant drugs in the UK.
(EDIT: As of 31st May 2023 we MIGHT be getting access to them! Exciting!)
When you present at the GP with a headache, and the GP diagnoses you with migraine, they won’t usually jump to prescribing preventatives.
They will usually prescribe acute medications first, if anything at all.
It’s not uncommon to be told to take high dose dispersible aspirin or other over the counter meds marketed for migraine.
These meds are usually your average ibuprofen or paracetamol with added caffeine, sometimes with an added anti-emetic.
Remember that migraines aren’t a headache, so your stomach can stop working or work inefficiently when you’re having one.
Prescribing an acute pain relief medication alongside an anti-emetic helps your body actually absorb that acute med while you’re having an attack.
In my experience, no GP ever suggested or prescribed an anti-emetic alongside an acute treatment when I first went to them with migraines, so be prepared to have to make that suggestion yourself, and to be shot down if they disagree.
The usual anti-emetics will be metoclopramide hydrochloride, or prochlorperazine (also used for schizophrenia and anxiety)
Sometimes, your GP will prescribe naproxen, or another prescription NSAID for your migraines.
If you’re lucky, your GP might prescribe a triptan.
I believe the most common is ‘sumatriptan’ but there are a whole host of them (rizatriptan and almotriptan might be two others you’ve heard about).
I’m currently taking eletriptan, which is a much older triptan and not widely used by most GP’s for some reason.
This to say, that if you’re prescribed eg sumatriptan and it doesn’t work for you, try asking for another type.
Another reason triptans might not work for you is the method of administration.
If your migraines present with a lot of vomiting, something that melts on your tongue or a buccal tablet that dissolves under your upper lip might work better for you than a tablet you swallow. Some of them even come in nasal sprays.
TL;DR – Acute Treatment - Medications
- Paracetamol
- Ibuprofen
- Aspirin (dispersible aspirin for fast absorption, 900mg best dose)
- Co-codamol (voted most likely to cause rebound headaches)
- Naproxen (prescription only)
- Triptans (prescription only?)
- Anti-emetics (metoclopramide, prochlorperazine)
- Other prescription NSAIDs (tolfenamic acid, diclofenac potassium, diclofenac sodium, mefenamic acid)
- US only? -gepants
You can’t take most of these medications indefinitely.
They recommend taking cocodamol no more than 3 days in a row because of risk of addiction.
You can’t take metoclopramide for a long time.
Almost all of these meds can cause rebound/medication overuse headaches
Not to mention the side effects these meds come with, or the stress you might be putting on your kidneys/liver/rest of your body.
When your pain is that bad that you CAN’T care about the risks of taking something that might make a little dent in the agonies, you don’t think about those risks.
The hard part is that you get to the point where you HAVE TO start thinking about those risks.
Taking painkillers all day every day every time isn’t sustainable.
I know, it sucks.
Maybe in the future they’ll come up with a painkiller we can take that will reduce the pain without side effects destroying your body, but we’re not there yet.
Just another happy part of being alive as someone with chronic pain!
BUT! That’s where ‘complimentary’ treatments come in. These come in preventative and acute flavours too, with a lot of overlap, but we’re looking at acute treatments this time around.
If you’re a long-term chronic pain patient, you’ll probably already know about all of these.
I covered “lifestyle changes” that might help headaches in THIS PART, and you can use those here (sticking to a sleep schedule, regular meals, staying hydrated, ugh, yeah, I know, it helps though), but, for more urgent relief:
***Little disclaimer, not everything will work for everyone. Maybe you have other conditions that contraindicate these ideas. I’m not a medical professional, just a dude who suffers and uses this stuff to suffer a little less.***
- Cold treatment (ice packs, sticky cold patches, running cold water over your head, cold swimming, cold gels in a tube, ice hats)
- Heat treatment (electric heat pads, microwaveable heat packs, sticky heat patches, hot water bottles, hot baths)
- Balms (tiger balm, roll-on headache gels, pulse point gels, menthol rubs)
- Aromatherapy (helpful sometimes, but just as likely to aggravate your migraine as not. Proceed with caution.)
- Hot drinks (I don’t know why, but a cup of hot chocolate really takes the edge off my migraines?)
- Cold drinks, with ice
- Massage/Muscle treatments (anything from muscle relaxant bubble baths to massage rollers to getting someone to rub your back for you, if you’re lucky enough to have someone willing to do that)
- Gentle stretching (you can find a lot online; look for post-operative/elderly/low impact stretches)
- Sleep masks/Sunglasses (get away, light!)
- Travel sickness pills or ginger caplets for nausea
- Acupuncture (there is a point between the index finger and thumb in the meat of your hand that is supposed to ease pain if you add pressure to it – it doesn’t really work for me, but it’s worth a try. I’d suggest Googling/YouTubing it. I have acupuncture needles and have been shown how to use them, so it might be worth asking if you know a practitioner you trust?)
I’m sure I’m missing something that will come to me later.
For travel, I take:
- painkillers and my triptans (and anti-emetic when I’m allowed to have one)
- travel sickness pills/ginger pills
- balm tin/roller
- cold balm/sometimes cold patches
- shades
I’ve also shaved my head – I usually go down to a Grade 1, but have gone 0 before, which was weird.
Hair grows back surprisingly fast, and having short hair is amazing for migraines, especially in the summer.
You don’t need to spend so much time washing/drying your hair (which is helpful when you’re in the midst of an attack and/or have comorbidities that make showering difficult).
You can also apply cold/heat treatments closer to the scalp, but be careful not to burn yourself (I am absolutely not speaking from experience…)
On a greater scale, just making your room (or wherever you go to hide when you have migraines) as comfortable for you as possible is helpful. Enough pillows, blankets you can kick off if you overheat, a fan to keep the room cool but not cold, curtains or blackout blinds depending on how much light you want to block out.
I use a text-to-speech app to read fanfic to me, or I listen to audiobooks when I’m being photosensitive but can manage sound, and don’t want to be bored out of my gourd.
Has anyone else got any other tips that don’t fall into the above categories for help when you’re having a migraine?
Next up in this series: Preventative Treatment (Meds and Complimentary Treatments)
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ayurmedia · 2 years
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mitinosh · 1 year
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