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Dr Prabash Prabhakaran

  • SIMS Hospital, Vadapalani, Chennai – 600026
+91-91508 51508

Headache Treatment

Overview

Almost everyone gets headaches. But not all headaches are the same, and that distinction matters more than most people realise.

Some feel like pressure building behind the eyes. Others throb. Some wrap around the head like a tight band. Some hit one side hard and leave the other untouched. They can last twenty minutes or two days. They can be a minor inconvenience or completely derail a workday.

A headache is a symptom, not a single condition. Getting to the bottom of what type is happening and what's causing it is what separates short-term relief from actually solving the problem. Reaching for painkillers every time without ever asking why tends to be how occasional headaches turn into a much more persistent issue.

Headache Overview

Why Frequent Headaches Deserve Proper Attention

A single headache after a rough night or a stressful week isn't something to lose sleep over. But headaches that keep showing up, or that are steadily getting worse, aren't something to just grit your teeth through either.

Recurring headaches chip away at sleep quality, concentration, mood, and physical activity. People cancel plans, fall behind at work, and start building their lives around when the next one might hit.

Getting properly evaluated means finding out what's actually driving them, which opens the door to treatment that works rather than repeated short-term fixes.

Who Benefits From Treatment?

Worth getting assessed if you're dealing with:

Frequent headaches

Headaches that happen frequently or are getting more frequent.

Severe headaches

Severe headaches that stop you functioning normally.

Migraines

Migraines with or without aura.

One-sided headaches

One-sided headaches that keep returning.

Headaches with other symptoms

Headaches alongside dizziness or visual changes.

New patterns

New headache patterns that feel different from before.

Impact on daily life

Headaches affecting sleep, work, or daily life consistently.

Types of Headaches

Migraine

Migraine is one of the most common neurological conditions people live with, often without realising that's what it is. The pain tends to be moderate to severe, usually one-sided, and often comes with sensitivity to light and sound, nausea, and sometimes visual disturbances. Some people also experience dizziness. Migraine isn't just a bad headache. It's a neurological event.

Tension Headache

The most common type. Usually feels like a band of pressure or tightness around the forehead or across the scalp. Not typically one-sided, and usually doesn't come with the nausea or light sensitivity of migraine. Stress and muscle tension are common drivers.

Cluster Headaches

Less common, but arguably the most painful type. Intense pain concentrated around one eye, often coming in cycles. People who get cluster headaches tend to describe them as unbearable. They don't last long but they hit hard and repeatedly during an active cluster period.

Sinus Headaches

Facial pressure and headache around the forehead or cheeks can feel like a sinus issue. Sometimes it is. But a lot of what gets labelled a sinus headache turns out to be migraine. Worth getting properly assessed rather than assuming.

Secondary Headaches

These are headaches caused by something else going on in the body. High blood pressure, medication overuse, infections, and other medical conditions can all produce headache as a downstream symptom. When the pattern doesn't fit the common types, this possibility needs to be explored.

What's Causing Them

  • Migraine Migraine is the most common cause of recurring headaches that significantly affect daily life.
  • Stress and tension Stress and tension feed directly into tension headaches and can also worsen migraine frequency and severity.
  • Poor sleep Poor sleep is both a trigger and a consequence of headaches. The relationship runs both ways, which is why addressing sleep is often part of treatment.
  • Dehydration Dehydration is one of the most consistently overlooked headache triggers. Not drinking enough through the day can be enough to set one off in people who are prone to them.
  • High blood pressure High blood pressure can cause headaches when significantly elevated, though this is less common than people assume.
  • Lifestyle factors Skipped meals, too much screen time, irregular sleep, and poor hydration all have a cumulative effect on headache frequency for many people.
Headache Causes

How It Gets Diagnosed

Pattern recognition is central to headache diagnosis. Where exactly is the pain? Which side, or both? How long do episodes last? What makes them worse or better? Are there any accompanying symptoms like nausea, dizziness, or visual changes?

A neurological evaluation covers medical history, a neurological examination, and imaging where the clinical picture warrants it. Identifying headache triggers is also part of this process, because knowing what sets them off shapes both treatment and prevention.

01

Pattern recognition — location, side, duration, triggers, accompanying symptoms

02

Full medical history and neurological examination

03

Imaging where the clinical picture warrants it

Treatment Options

Lifestyle Modifications

For a lot of people, consistent lifestyle changes make a bigger difference than medication. Regular sleep schedules, staying well hydrated, not skipping meals, managing stress, and keeping physically active all reduce headache frequency over time. Simple in theory, but genuinely effective when followed consistently.

Migraine Management

Migraine treatment works on two levels: relieving symptoms during an attack, and reducing how often attacks happen in the first place. Both matter, and the balance between them depends on how frequently migraines occur.

Trigger Identification

Keeping track of when headaches happen, how long they last, and what preceded them builds a pattern over time. That pattern is often the most useful guide to long-term management.

Treating the Underlying Condition

When headaches are connected to blood pressure, sleep disorders, vestibular conditions, or medication overuse, the underlying issue needs to be addressed. Treating just the headache without touching the cause is a short-term approach.

Preventive Care

For people with frequent headaches, preventive treatment reduces both the frequency and severity of attacks. Worth discussing when headaches are happening regularly enough to affect daily function.

Recovery and Follow-Up

When the triggers are identified and the right treatment is in place, most people see a meaningful reduction in how often headaches happen and how severe they are when they do.

Follow-up appointments track how the treatment plan is working, allow adjustments when needed, and keep an eye on whether patterns are changing. The goal isn't just to get through each headache. It's to have fewer of them, and to get back to functioning without planning around them.

Prevention

Preventing headaches depends on consistency. Understanding your own pattern helps prevent recurrence.

1

Regular sleep and wake time

2

Adequate hydration

3

Balanced meals

4

Good posture

5

Stress control

When a Headache Needs Urgent Attention

Most headaches aren't dangerous. But some warrant prompt medical assessment.

Seek urgent evaluation if a headache:

  • Comes on suddenly and severely, unlike anything before
  • Is accompanied by weakness, numbness, or difficulty speaking
  • Causes confusion or altered consciousness
  • Follows a head injury
  • Comes with vision loss
  • Represents a clear change from your usual headache pattern

A headache that feels different from any you've had before should always be taken seriously.

When to Seek Care

Seek medical advice if headaches are affecting your daily life.

Early evaluation helps identify the cause and guide treatment.

Headaches are frequent
Pain is severe or different from usual
There are neurological symptoms such as weakness or vision changes
Headaches are getting worse over time
Our Approach

Dr Prabash's Approach

Dr Prabash's approach to headaches starts with understanding what type is happening and what's driving it. A structured neurological evaluation looks at whether symptoms relate to migraine, tension-type headaches, vestibular disorders, blood pressure, or other neurological conditions.

Every treatment plan is shaped around what that particular person is experiencing, what their triggers look like, and what they want to get back to — keeping both immediate relief and longer-term prevention in focus.

FAQs

Migraine and tension headaches are the two most frequently seen. Cluster headaches, while less common, are among the most severe. Secondary headaches caused by underlying conditions make up another category worth knowing about.
No single answer covers everyone. Migraine, stress, not drinking enough water, disrupted sleep, blood pressure issues, and medication overuse are among the most common factors. Often several of these are working together.
Yes. It's one of the most common and most overlooked triggers.
Migraine is the most frequent cause of headaches that consistently affect one side.
Chronic migraine, medication overuse, sleep disorders, and ongoing stress are among the most common culprits.
Identifying and managing triggers, making consistent lifestyle adjustments, and following through on an appropriate treatment plan are the most effective approaches.
A neurologist is well-placed to assess recurring, severe, or unexplained headaches and guide treatment.
When a headache is sudden and severe, feels different from your usual pattern, or comes with neurological symptoms. Get that assessed promptly.

Before Your Appointment

The more detailed a picture you can paint of your headache pattern, the more targeted and useful the assessment becomes.

Keep a headache record

Note when they happen, how long they last, where the pain is, how severe it is, and anything that might have triggered it.

Medical information

Previous scans, medication lists, medical history, and any family history of migraine or neurological conditions.

Your questions

About the diagnosis, treatment options, prevention, and what recovery looks like. Write them down beforehand so nothing gets forgotten.

Medications

Everything you're currently taking, including supplements. Medication overuse is a common and often missed contributor to frequent headaches.