Your Questions
Your Questions
Q: I have read that there is a cosmetic procedure that cures migraine headaches. I have had migraines for years and sometimes they are so bad I can’t leave the house. If there is an operation to cure this migraine problem, I would sign up for it in a minute! Can you tell what they are talking about?
A: The use of Botox for the treatment of glabellar furrows (wrinkles between the eyes) has been done for decades. One of the very interesting findings from that cosmetic treatment was that plastic surgeons discovered that some patients with frontal migraines got a temporary cure, as long as the Botox lasted. The now proven theory is that in those patients with a focus of their migraines that starts above their eyes in the brow area are caused by the muscles squeezing the sensory nerves that exit from the bone there. This is why Botox relieves those migraines…it stops those muscles from working.
If you take that one step further, a browlift (of any type) can create the same effect as Botox except that its results will last much longer and maybe even permanently. That is because during a browlift some of the muscles are removed to prevent that type of wrinkling action. Recent studies and publications in the journal Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery has shown that certain types of migraines can be cured by performing a modified forehead/brow lift. Therefore, the type of forehead lift used to cure migraines could also lead to one looking younger as well. This type of cosmetic operation has been shown to be safe, effective and can lead to a tremendous improvement in the quality of some migraine patient’s lives.
Dr. Barry Eppley
Indianapolis Indiana
Q: I wanted to get some information as far as migraines and Botox. I have suffered with migraines for many, many years and have read that Botox can help. My headaches usually start around the eyebrow area. Thank you.
A: The fact that your migraines have a focal area of initiation at the eyebrows strongly suggests that their origin is compression of the supraobital/supratrochlear nerves. Contraction of these muscles squeezes the nerves that they surround and causes a painfuol migraine to start. Botox has a good chance of having a positive effect since it weakens the muscles around those nerves as they exit from the brow bone. This is a simple treatment that looks like it may work well for you. For a few hundred dollars, you can easily prove this migraine theory. While the effect of Botox is not permanent, many responsive patients find it to be a temporary miracle that provides a level of relief that no other medication does. In select migraine patients, plastic surgeons have learned many years ago that Botox around the brow area reliefs headaches. The key to whether Botox will be a successful migraine treatment is to have a very specific point of headache origin at one of the major cranial sensory exit sites from the skull. Botox is not effective for many types of migraines, just ones that have a very specific focus or loci.
If Botox is effective, that would mean that endoscopic supraorbital/supratrochlear nerve decompression may provide some long-term reduction in your migraine symptoms.
Dr. Barry Eppley
Indianapolis, Indiana