(as posted on NYTimes Consults blog)
Fluorescent Lighting, Computer Monitors and Migraines
Q. My husband gets disabling headaches from fluorescent lighting, even the new compact ones that look more like incandescent light. Also from looking directly at LCD monitors. Although he works at home and can avoid this lighting for the most part, it’s very disabling, prevents him from going many places that he’d like to, taking our daughter places, etc.
Ellen, New England
A. Dr. Dodick explains:
Light-induced migraine is common, and light often amplifies the pain after the headache has begun. (Doctors refer to this occurrence as photophobia.) There is exciting new research on the anatomical pathways that account for how and why migraine is worsened by light, and ongoing research to explain how and why light may trigger a migraine attack.
There aren’t novel treatment strategies yet to deal with light as a trigger, other than what your husband has already tried. That includes the use of preventive medications like topiramate (brand name Topamax), which may reduce one’s susceptibility to light as a trigger, so long as he and his physician can find a drug that he tolerates. I am confident that as we learn more about the mechanism involved in light as a trigger over the next five years, we will find better strategies to circumvent this problem.
Loss of Focus and Sensitivity to Light and Sound
Q. I often get headaches that are only moderately painful but are debilitating — I can’t think clearly or focus, am sensitive to light and sound, lack normal appetite, am lethargic. Could this be some kind of migraine?
Anonymous, San Francisco
A. Dr. Dodick explains:
Indeed, the cognitive symptoms, sensitivity to light and sound, lack of appetite and lethargy are very typical symptoms of migraine. However, other disorders can mimic the symptoms of migraine. A thorough evaluation by your physician is necessary to arrive at an accurate diagnosis so that you can receive appropriate treatment.
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According to Vitals.com, Dr. David Dodick is a Vascular Neurologist specializing in Headache & Migraine Disorders. He completed his residency at Mayo Medical School in 1994 and fellowship at Sunnybrook Medical Centre in 1996. Dr. Dodick has a 5 minute average wait-time and rated 3 stars out of 4 by patients.
See more about Dr. David Dodick
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Hello,
Thanks for all the answers to these questions. I am sure that many people would be highly benefited from it.
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