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Understanding your Ayurvedic Constitution can Bring Headache Relief
By Jennifer Barrett
A headache sufferer's medicine chest often tells the story of
once-promising treatments abandoned. Sedatives, beta-blockers, and
narcotics represent just some of the high-octane prescriptions
people use to quell extreme pain.
And there's a lot of pain around. The heavyweight champions of
headaches are migraines and clusters. Migraines affect more than 26
million Americans, according to the American Medical Association,
and are three times more common in women, especially those in their
20s and 30s.
Migraines cause moderate-to-severe pain and last anywhere from four
to 72 hours, often on one side of the head. They frequently include
symptoms like nausea, vomiting, and acute light and sound
sensitivity.
Clusters are less common; only 1 percent of the population is
affected, and 80 percent of those are men. Clusters cause
brain-throbbing pain often described as a "poker in the eye." They
traditionally occur daily for periods of weeks, months, or even
years, with each headache lasting on average less than one hour.
The menu of drugs used for either type of headache does bring some
relief but not for everyone and not all the time. Many Ayurvedic
practitioners believe the greatest flaw of these drugs is they
seldom get to the root of the problem. "Often practitioners of
Western medicine only detect the last two stages of disease
development, the point when the problem manifests and bears clinical
signs," says Swami Sada Shiva Tirtha, D.Sc., founder of the Ayurveda
Holistic Center and the School of Ayurveda in Bayville, New York.
"But problems start long before that."
Looking beyond the immediate pain, you'll find several contributing
and relatively manageable factors. The first place to check,
suggests Nancy Lonsdorf, M.D., medical director at The Raj Maharishi
Ayur-Veda Health Center in Fairfield, Iowa, is the balance of
doshas.
"People who are stronger in pitta, or the fire element, will often
be more prone to migraine," she says. "Pitta governs digestion and
metabolism, and for them eating pitta-aggravating foods, such as red
wine, aged cheeses, or acidic fruits like tomatoes and citrus, can
make things worse. When diet, stomach, and liver get excessively
acidic, the blood can get some quality of that, which provokes
aggravation of nerves and then blood flow to the head."
In addition to dietary precautions, Lonsdorf recommends cooling the
nervous system by applying a small amount of pitta-pacifying ghee
(clarified butter) daily into the nostrils and sniffing. Also try a
mixture of one part powdered ginger with four parts rock sugar or
organic turbinado sugar; put one-quarter teaspoon in a half cup cool
water and drink. This activates purification of the digestive tract
and prevents nausea and vomiting.
Clusters also reflect the digestion problems of pitta, says Lonsdorf,
along with an imbalance in vata, the air element that governs nerves
and circulation. "To calm vata, go to bed early and give yourself
regular self-massages with organic sesame or olive oil." Clusters'
signature traits—teary eyes, facial sweating, and stuffy nose—signal
the body's attempt to flush out toxins. So Lonsdorf suggests regular
purifying, such as a daily 10-minute eucalyptus steam inhalation.
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