Health

9 Migraine Diet Dos and Don’ts

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If you have migraine, you know that migraine attacks can be brought on by a variety of factors. These can include high stress levels, sleep disruptions, weather changes — and your diet, including both what you eat and drink, and when.

“Dietary triggers are some of the more common triggers reported by people with migraine,” says Vincent Martin, MD, the director of the headache and facial pain center at the University of Cincinnati Gardner Neuroscience Institute in Ohio and president of the National Headache Foundation (NHF). Part of the frustration of living with migraine is trying to figure out what triggers them. “You might have a glass of red wine one time and have a headache, [but] another time, you don’t,” he says.

First, it’s good to understand how migraine differs from other types of headaches. According to Juliana VanderPluym, MD, a headache specialist in the department of neurology at the Mayo Clinic in Phoenix, Arizona, a migraine attack is not just a headache but a change in “brain state,” meaning senses like touch, sight, and smell are also affected.

While scientists debate the exact cause of migraine, it appears that environmental factors such as diet play a role in triggering migraine attacks. To prevent attacks (and improve your overall health), try making these adjustments to your diet.

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