Tony Demaria knows
firsthand the debilitating pain that can occur if he goes to see his
favorite rock band live in concert. Sitting in his doctor’s
office at the Keeler
Migraine
Center in Ojai, he shakes his
head and laments,” I shouldn’t have gone.” But surprisingly, his doctor
emphatically disagrees, “What, and miss the Stones?” Instead, Dr. Robert Cowan,
the center’s Medical Director, reminds Tony how to pre-treat himself
so that he doesn’t have to consider passing up the next concert.
Nine years
ago, Tony began having severe migraine headaches about once a
month. Gradually they
occurred more often, with increasing severity. His doctor at the time
started prescribing Maxalt, which provided the relief he needed from
pain so acute he couldn’t fathom getting out of bed unless he needed
to vomit – a common symptom of migraine sufferers. The Maxalt, however, only
provided temporary relief and sometimes caused rebound
migraines. Thus he
found himself in a vicious cycle, and the drug was making him “dumb
and punchy.”
“I was hurting,” recalls the
61-year-old Ojaian, who was having incapacitating migraines several
times per week.
Desperate to find help,
Tony found the Keeler
Migraine
Center about a year ago. The center was founded as
the clinical arm to the Huntington Medical Research Institutes by
Dr. Cowan, Senior Clinical Research Scientist, and his associate,
Dr. Michael Harrington, Scientific Director of Molecular
Neurology. Actively
involved in the research behind the study of headaches, the two
brought the integration of their work in the lab to the care of
migraine sufferers at the clinic two years
ago.
The center
targets patients who are acute migraine sufferers. “The more they hurt, the
more we can help,” promises Dr. Cowan, who has himself suffered
migraines since childhood.
Although there is no cure for migraines, the clinic has a
proven track record of treatment plans that bring about a reduction
in frequency, severity and duration.
When Tony, one of 28
million migrainers nationwide, started coming to the
Keeler
Center, he first went through a
comprehensive process that educated him about migraines. He began with journaling, a
cathartic process that also helped identify his
“triggers.”
As a
self-employed business owner working 60-80 hours per week and
commuting to Los Angeles, stress was steadily becoming a factor in
his recurring migraines.
In addition to stress, heat, light, sound and even vigorous
exercise negatively affected him. Dr. Cowan urged Tony to
reduce his work week and develop a steady routine with regards to
sleep, diet and exercise since interruptions to established routines
are known triggers.
“Regular had never been in my vocabulary.” But on the doctor’s advice,
Tony is now maintaining a 40-hour work week, exercising with less
intensity and taking advantage of the clinic’s weekly meditation and
support groups, which are among the many complementary therapies
offered.
Reflecting on
his progress, he has seen tremendous improvement. “And my wife has noticed the
difference!” he laughs and says of the woman he married 42 years
ago. Now for Tony, a
good week means either having no migraine or just a mild headache,
which for him is a world of difference.
Migraine
Statistics:
Migraines are
considered a chronic disease.
National cost
of migraines: $14 billion per year, mostly in lost
productivity.
$2 billion per
year is spent on medicines and doctor’s
visits.
The World
Health Organization states that migraines can be more disabling than
paraplegia.
There are 28 million
migraine sufferers in the
United
States.
Migraines are
3 times more common in women than men.
1/3 of
menopausal women tend to lose their
migraines.