Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Treatment

Few episodic tension headache with a doctor. One reason is that the voltage is generally easy to treat with medications. Other reasons may be the fear of not being taken seriously by the doctor or the misperception that the tension is purely psychological in nature, admitting that you have one means that you are weak or neurotic. Although much remains unknown about the controversy and tension, the condition is widely recognized as a biological disorder. And fortunately, while doctors can disagree on the causes of this type of headache, they do not know how to help you. Medicines A variety of drugs, both OTC (OTC) and prescription, are available for the treatment of tension. You can find fast, effective relief of pain as taking aspirin, ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin, others) or acetaminophen (Tylenol, others). These drugs are inexpensive and readily available, and do not need a prescription from your doctor. People with chronic diseases or severe tension headaches may require stronger painkillers or preventive medications to reduce the frequency and severity of head pain. Who works best drugs varies from one person to another. If you have any headaches or chronic episodic, not abuse MVL. Limit your use of analgesics to two days per week. Try to take their drugs only when necessary, and use the smallest dose needed to relieve your pain. Overusing pain medications can cause rebound headaches or development of chronic daily headache, triggering the very symptoms that you are trying to stop. In addition, all medications used to treat headaches have side effects, some of which can be severe. For prescription drugs, of course, follow the recommended dosage and not exceed it. Acute therapy Acute therapy aims to prevent or reduce pain in case of attack head. Different drugs are used for the treatment of acute tension: Analgesics. Pain is pain. Acetaminophen (Tylenol, others) and a class of drugs known as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are effective in reducing the pain of the moment. Side effects of acetaminophen are rare, but if you take the drug in high doses for long periods of time, it can cause serious liver damage. NSAIDs include drugs aspirin, ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin IB, others) and naproxen sodium (Aleve). Prescription NSAIDs include naproxen (Naprelan, Naprosyn), indomethacin (Indocin) and ketorolac tromethamine (Toradol). Side effects include nausea, diarrhea or constipation, stomach or abdominal pain, stomach bleeding and ulcers. You can reduce or eliminate these symptoms by taking NSAIDs after meals or with milk. Combination of drugs. Aspirin or acetaminophen (or both of these analgesics) are often associated with caffeine or a sedative drugs in a single medication. For example, Excedrin combines aspirin, acetaminophen and caffeine. Combination drugs such as this can be more effective than pure analgesic for pain. Although many combinations of drugs are sold over-sedating analgesic combinations can be obtained only by prescription, as they can be addictive and can lead to chronic daily headache. Do not use these drugs for more than two days per week, and used only with careful monitoring by a doctor. Other drugs. For people who have experience both migraine and tension headaches episodic, a triptan can effectively relieve the pain of headaches. Opiates, or drugs are rarely used because of their side effects and the potential for addiction. They include codeine combined with acetaminophen (Tylenol with codeine No. 3). The drugs do not cure headaches, and over time painkillers and other drugs can lose their effectiveness. In addition, all medicines have side effects. If you take regular medication, including the products you buy OTC, to discuss the risks and benefits with her doctor. Also, remember that pain medications are not a substitute for recognizing and treating stress factors that can cause headaches. Arabic to English BETAChinese to English BETAChinese (Simplified to Traditional) BETAChinese (Traditional to Simplified) BETAEnglish to Arabic BETAEnglish to Chinese (Simplified) BETAEnglish to Chinese (Traditional) BETAEnglish to FrenchEnglish to GermanEnglish to ItalianEnglish to Japanese BETAEnglish to Korean BETAEnglish to PortugueseEnglish to Russian BETAEnglish to SpanishFrench to EnglishFrench to GermanGerman to EnglishGerman to FrenchItalian to EnglishJapanese to English BETAKorean to English BETAPortuguese to EnglishRussian to English BETASpanish to English

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