Cluster headaches are among the most painful and debilitating headaches, often described as one of the most intense types of pain a person can experience. These headaches occur in cyclical patterns or clusters, which give them their name. For those suffering from this condition, relief can often feel out of reach. However, advancements in medical treatments have provided new hope. One such advancement is the result of our clinical trial 2022-2022. In this challenging trial, we pinpointed the Cluster headaches’ trigger to a neuroma of the zygomaticotemporal nerve, a branch of the trigeminal nerve. A Histopathologic examination provided proof in addition to the complete resolution of cluster headache attacks for over two years in the participating individuals.
Key Symptoms of Cluster Headaches:
It starts with a tingle in the temple and grows in an attack. It feels like a knife struck the trough eye inside the skull, trying to crack open it from inside. Then followed by
- Excruciating, sharp pain around one eye or on one side of the head
- Redness and tearing of the eye on the affected side
- Stuffy or runny nose on the affected side
- Drooping eyelid and constricted pupil on the affected side
- Restlessness or agitation during an attack
Traditional headache associations speculated the cluster’s cause in the hypothalamus for many years.
Traditional treatments for cluster headaches include medications such as triptans, CGRP-related monoclonal antibodies, oxygen therapy, and preventive treatments like calcium channel blockers and LSD and mushrooms (Psychedelics). However, these treatments seem to shoot an arrow in the dark because they do not provide an objective base for a cure.
Immediate Relief
Our study projected evidence of zygomaticotemporal Neuroma/ disorganized nerve bundle as a triggering source of the ECCH. This Subject of surgical exploration and resection might cure the long-term Episodic and chronic cluster headaches ECCH. It may light up puzzling questions and treatments, save a life, and ease the psycho-social and financial burden on individual patients and society. The procedure is straightforward and accessible in the hands of an experienced physician, with no need for a reconstructive procedure. A pathologic examination of resected tissue is imperative and may increase clinical confidence in the expected result. However, a simultaneous treatment approach to the potential contralateral migraine makes it imperative concerning the complete resolution of individual headaches. Our approach practically ends the utilization of Psychedelics, monoclonal antibodies, Oxygen use, and the use of implanted electrostimulations.
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