Blisss said:
Here's a home treatment that uses a combination of heat & cold to relieve migraines:
The person with the migraine should sit in a comfortable chair. Their friend/family member should then prepare a foot bath with very hot water. (Not hot enough to burn -- but hot enough that you'll need to ease each foot slowly into the water.) At the same time, friend/family member should place an ice pack at the base of migraine-sufferer’s neck . Relax in this position for at least 15 minutes. The combination of hot and cold therapy is very effective in balancing the blood flow imbalance that can cause migraines.
Perfect. This method works very well.
On a table, keep in mind that the migraineur may not be able to lay down flat. Flat= excruciating escalation of symptoms. Use a wedge or prop the client up with pillows. Try sidelying.
Massage during migraine is rarely helpful unless the "migraine" is really a combination session or has been set off by muscle tension, (which really = tension headache that acts like migraine.) Room should be quiet and dark, air should be cool, but body should be warm. In a real migraine, many people can't regulate their own body temperature well, so cool air and layered blankets helps.
Getting heat on the feet/legs/sacrum, can be helpful. If you find "the spot", stay with it. Keep in mind that your massage may only end up being a diversion from the pain, but this is very valuable. In an extended migraine, you can feel like you're going insane, but 30 minutes of pain relief can get you through until the migraine cycle breaks.
Last: Contraindications. If the client has had migraine for 3 days, and this is widely outside of their usual pattern, do not treat. If the client has never had a migraine, and this is the first. do not treat. Both of these situations need further evaluation by a specialist.
If the migraine is similar to other headaches, just lasting longer, proceed cautiously, massage is not C/I. If the migraine came on after an injury (such as auto accident,) and the patient has been thoroughly checked out, massage is not C/I, though you may want to have a doctor's script in hand.
People often self-refer for migraine. Don't assume all "migraines" are actually migraine. Headaches are very complex, and it's good to take a complete description of the type of pain, location, onset, what helps, what worsens, how long they last, etc. Find out if they are taking medication specifically to treat the headaches, ask how long they have had headaches in general? Is this from childhood? Three years ago? Last week? Any other symptoms? (nausea, vomiting, hot/cold/sweating, visual disturbances, speech aphasia, tingling in arms or fingers, tender scalp, facial pain, teeth hurting, or?)
The best time to treat a migraine is when they are not happening. Sadly, most of us who suffer from them like to pretend they don't exist between episodes. Or, even worse, we become so afraid of setting off another one we will put off treatment because we don't want to chance destabilizing.