When the "Cure" Becomes the Cause: Escaping the Medication Over-Use Headache Trap
If you have ever felt the crushing weight of a migraine attack, you know that the word “pain” barely does it justice. In clinical studies and patient surveys, severe migraine attacks are frequently rated as more debilitating than kidney stones, fractures, or even childbirth.
When you are in the middle of that storm, you will do almost anything to make it stop. I know I used to!
You reach for the box of triptans or the bottle of NSAIDs because you simply need to survive the day. But I want to ask you a very important, though perhaps frustrating question:
Could the very thing you are relying on to manage this awful pain actually be worsening the severity of it for you?
Yes, this is a very real possibility, and it affects far more people than most realize.
It is called Medication-overuse headache (MOH), and today, we are going to look at the science of why this happens and, more importantly, how we can break the cycle and start your Renaissance.
An important note before we dive in: I do not mean that medication doesn’t have a valuable play a role here. In fact, preventative medication use can be critical for some people’s recovery journey.
The Hidden Global Burden
We used to think of medication overuse as a sort of “side issue.”
We now know it is a significant driver of disability worldwide. According to the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) Study 2023 [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41240916], the numbers are staggering. In the general adult population, about 1% to 2% of people live with MOH, but a recent meta-analyses by Husøy et al. [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41057756] indicates that the global prevalence of MOH may be as high as 4.1% in adults aged 18–65.
This comes out to tens to hundreds of millions of people seriously (and needlessly I might add) suffering world wide.
Perhaps the most impactful finding from the GBD 2023 study is this: more than 20% of all health loss attributed to all headache types was actually due to medication overuse.
Specifically, over 15% of health loss attributed to migraine and more than 50% for tension-type headache is driven by overconsumption of acute pain relief meds.
In our Migraine Bucket [https://movewells.substack.com/p/why-simply-avoiding-triggers-isnt] https://movewells.substack.com/p/why-simply-avoiding-triggers-isntFramework [https://movewells.substack.com/p/why-simply-avoiding-triggers-isnt], imagine your “rescue” meds are meant to bail water out of the bucket (or perhaps prevent some water from flowing in). But in MOH, the medication eventually starts acting like a leaky faucet that stays on 24/7. Your bucket never gets a chance to empty because the medicine itself is keeping the water level high and even can shrink your bucket over time, making your trigeminal system highly “sensitized”.
Are You in the “Overuse” Zone?
So, how do doctors actually diagnose this? The ICHD-3 (the International Classification of Headache Disorders) sets clear criteria:
* (A) Headache occurring on 15 or more days per month in a patient with a pre-existing headache disorder.
* (B) Regular overuse for more than 3 months of one or more drugs that can be taken for acute and/or symptomatic treatment of headache.
* (C) Not better accounted for by another ICHD-3 diagnosis.
But “overuse” can look different depending on the drug! Not all medications are created equal here. According to the Department of Veterans Affairs [https://www.healthquality.va.gov/guidelines/pain/headache/VA-DOD-CPG-Headache-Full-CPG.pdf] and EAN guidelines [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32430926]:
* The 10-Day Threshold: Triptans, ergotamines, and combination analgesics (like those containing caffeine) only take 10 days per month to trigger MOH.
* The 15-Day Threshold: Simple analgesics like NSAIDs (Ibuprofen, Naproxen) or Acetaminophen are recognized to take around 15 days per month.
* The High-Risk Red Zones: The VA guidelines highlight that opioids can induce MOH in as few as 8 days per month, and butalbital-containing medications (short acting barbiturates like Fioricet) can do it in just 5 days per month.
Important note: MOH doesn’t affect everyone equally! It disproportionately affects females (with ratios ranging from 2:1 to 3.6:1, female:male) and typically peaks during the busiest years of life, between ages 35 and 54. Also individual variance can play a role in MOH issues too.
Risk Factors and the Path to Chronification
So now we know that medication overuse is a serious issue, but how do we better understand the risk of this developing so we can get ahead of it?
It is critical to proactively focus on early identification before episodic migraine turns into a chronic struggle. The Department of Veterans Affairs notes several associations that significantly increase the odds of developing MOH:
* High Headache Frequency: Having 7–14 headache days (tension type, cervicogenic, migraine attacks, etc.) per month (OR: 19.4; aka risk is 19.4X higher).
* History of Migraine: (OR: 8.1).
* Use of Other Medications: Using anxiolytics (anxiety meds; OR: 5.2), analgesics for any other condition (OR; 3.0), and sleep-inducing medications (OR: 2.5) are all linked to higher risk.
As a general recommendation, The American Headache Society recommends that people should limit acute medication use to an average of two headache days per week, but as you can tell this does not account for the much higher risk medications such as opioids or butalbital-containing medications.
If you find yourself exceeding this, it should be a prompt to consider more proactive preventive therapeutic approaches rather than just more rescue meds. Yes this can include medications, but also the 7-Pillars of Migraine Renaissance [https://movewells.substack.com/p/from-3-migraines-a-week-to-almost] are critical here too.
The Science of MOH Sensitization: Why Rescue Becomes Trigger
Now you might be wondering, “Why would a painkiller cause more pain?”
It comes down to how these drugs interact with your nervous system over time. While the mechanisms differ between drugs, the risky medications share a common destructive path: they promote sensitization of the trigeminal nerve and facilitate central sensitization; basically shrinking your migraine bucket.
Essentially, your brain becomes extra effective at experiencing pain and becomes more effective at having headaches.
The threshold for what triggers an attack drops lower and lower. In Robin’s case, which we’ll look at in a moment, her brain was essentially “learning” to be in more pain because of a variety of interconnected factors, but also the constant presence of these drugs altered her brain’s chemistry and pain-processing pathways .
A Narrative Journey: Robin’s Downward Spiral
To understand how this can progress, let’s look at “Robin,” a composite case that mirrors so many people I speak with. (I was going to use a specific client story, but sometimes these cases are so specific that I had a hard time keeping it anonymous and protecting their privacy).
Robin’s headache story started when she was about 26 years old after having her second son. She had experienced some random, infrequent headaches in the past, but it wasn’t until this last pregnancy that she started having diagnosed migraine attacks.
She started with about two migraines a month on average. They were painful, but manageable with a triptan.
Then, life got stressful. Her new baby added a wonderful, but challenging extra variable to life.
Sleep quality, duration, and consistency dropped off as she was up throughout the night helping calm her newborn. Her visits to the gym dropped, then stopped all together, she felt like if she didn’t have time for a full workout, there wasn’t any point in going.
Neck pain started creeping in, making it hard to find a comfortable nursing position, let alone work station posture.
Over the course of the next 6 months or so as she fought to return to working while navigating this major life change, her migraine attack frequency increased to one a week. She started taking Ibuprofen on the “off” days for what she thought were tension or “stress” headaches. She needed to power through the day and this seemed like the logical way to do it at the time.
By the end of that year, Sarah was waking up with a dull, “muddy” headache almost every day. She assumed her migraine condition was just naturally progressing and she wasn’t having much luck getting answers from her medical providers.
Robin’s MRI and CT scans were normal; she should be in perfect health according to those pictures, right? This pain hides behind functional neurological changes that are invisible to most imaging types.
To get through her morning work meetings, she took a triptan. By the afternoon, the “rebound” would hit, and she’d reach for a combination analgesic.
Without realizing it, she was now taking acute meds 22 days a month. She knew that it wasn’t the best to take over the counter pain meds, but she thought that was just for stomach ulcers or something like that and her stomach felt fine. So she just pushed on. That the “muddy” daily headache wasn’t her original migraine, it was the withdrawal symptom from yesterday’s medicine. She found herself trapped in a loop where she was treating the side effect of her last dose with her next dose.
Robin’s Migraine Bucket was shrinking and perpetually overflowing. Her trigeminovascular system was now in a constant state of high alert.
The Gold Standard for Reclaiming Your Life
If Robin’s story sounds familiar, please know there are fairly clear, evidence-based paths out.
The European Academy of Neurology (EAN) and VA guidelines highlight a “Gold Standard” approach that integrates education, withdrawal, and prevention:
1. Education and Counseling
The first step is not always necessarily a new pill. We need to find some clarity. It is critical to recognize the “cyclical nature” of MOH. You need to know the rationale for withdrawal and the expected timeline. As the EAN guidelines emphasize, education must precede any pharmacologic intervention, so here we are!
But, you should also consult your trusted medical provider if you suspect that this is something you’re facing!
2. Withdrawal Protocols and Bridging
* Abrupt Withdrawal: For those overusing simple analgesics (such as ibuprofen or acetaminophen), triptans (such as Maxalt, Imitrex), or ergot derivatives (such as Migranal, Cafergot), evidence supports the safety and efficacy of stopping “cold turkey” in most outpatient cases, however, this might not be optimal for many people and careful conversation with your provider is critical here. Tapering, bridging therapy, or preventative medication use at the same time might be better options.
* Gradual Taper: For people overusing opioids, barbiturates, or benzodiazepines, a gradual taper is advised to avoid complications like anxiety or sometimes very serious drug withdrawal symptoms/syndromes.
* Bridging Therapy: Often used for reducing the symptoms. Bridging therapies like short courses of corticosteroids (prednisone/prednisolone) and/or antiemetics (meds that aim to prevent nausea/vomiting) can help manage the temporary spike in headache and other related symtoms during withdrawal.
3. The Role of Preventive Medication Therapy
A 2020 randomized controlled trial published in JAMA [https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamaneurology/fullarticle/10.1001/jamaneurol.2020.1179?utm_source=openevidence&utm_medium=referral] found that starting preventive medication is a cornerstone for reducing the burden of MOH management, aligning well with the growing body of literature on the subject.
Their study showed that combined withdrawal plus preventive medication led to the fastest reduction in headache days and the highest rate of reversion to episodic headache (74.2% at 6 months), compared with preventive medication alone (60.0%) or withdrawal alone (41.7%).
* Topiramate: Has moderate evidence specifically for chronic migraine with medication overuse, though can carry relatively high side effect burden.
* Anti-CGRP Monoclonal Antibodies: This represents the most significant advancement in recent years for chronic migraine and MOH. Temper et al. found [https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamaneurology/fullarticle/10.1001/jamaneurol.2024.3043?utm_source=openevidence&utm_medium=referral] that Erenumab has significantly higher rates of “absence of MOH” compared to placebo and CGRP meds carry little to no risk of MOH.
* These medications also generally offer a superior safety and tolerability profile compared to topiramate for migraine prevention, with significantly lower rates of stopping their use because of side effects, though the rates of improved headache days and migraine related disability are comparable.
* OnabotulinumtoxinA (Botox): FDA-approved and demonstrated to reduce headache days by approximately 8 days per month on average in MOH populations.
The 7-Pillars: Your Support System for Withdrawal
While medications absolutely have their place in comprehensive migraine management, they are only a relatively small part of the story when we zoom out and consider people with migraines as more than just someone struggling with headaches.
These medication strategies can help to manage symptoms, but they miss the mark when it comes to an effective total health perspective and actually getting people back to doing what they love and supporting a long, health, and vibrant life.
The 7-Pillars of Migraine Renaissance are critical for managing migraine AND MOH because they provide the infrastructure to support your nervous system through the withdrawal phase, but are also critical foundational pieces of rebuilding capacity and resilience. For example:
* Pillar 1 (Efficient, Effective Exercise): Tailored, progressive movement helps build resilience. It provides a natural endorphin release that, when done correctly, doesn’t trigger a rebound.
* Pillar 2 (Sleep Optimization) & Pillar 4 (Stress Management and Nervous System Resilience): These are your natural “anti-sensitization” tools. When you withdraw from medication, your systems hyper-sensitive state is poorly regulated.
* Prioritizing effective support of your circadian rhythm and nervous system regulation (like effective stress management, breathwork, HRV training, biofeedback, etc) helps rebuild your migraine bucket, setting the stage for the other pillars to do their work.
* Pillar 7 (Sustainable Behavior Change): This is the “how”. Pulling from frameworks like the Transtheoretical model of change, the COM-B model, and S.M.A.R.T. goals, while having the support and structure to put it all together effectively into your life, help you have the highest odds of successfully making it through the withdrawal process even when it inevitably gets challenging.
Really, integrating all of these 7-Pillars of Migraine Renaissance effectively creates a combined health AND migraine management strategy that addresses you as a whole person, not just a headache with a body.
Actionable Steps: Your Medication Audit
To move from “thinking” to “doing,” try these steps this week:
* Conduct a 30-Day Audit: Look at your calendar or tracking app. On exactly how many days did you take any acute medication (triptans, NSAIDs, Acetaminophen, etc)?
* Identify “Double-Dipping”: Are you using multiple medications (like an NSAID and a triptan) to try to avoid crossing the threshold? Remember, they all count toward the total days of medication use.
* Seek Clarity, Not Just Relief: If you find you are bordering on overuse, schedule a visit with a trusted medical provider to discuss a formal withdrawal and prevention plan. Managing this is complex and often best done with clinical support to make sure you’re safe in this process.
Building the Renaissance Collective
Breaking the MOH cycle can be one of the most challenging first steps a person with migraine can do. It requires the courage to stand at the foot of that (often daunting) recovery mountain and choosing to take the first step.
I am currently building a dedicated community for those of you who are actively fighting back and searching for social support. I’m calling it The Migraine Renaissance Collective. It will be a space for shared experience, community connection and support, and embodying the frameworks needed to make these changes stick.
I want to know... What is the #1 thing that stops you from reducing your rescue medication use? Is it the fear of pain, the demands of your job, simply not knowing what else to use, or something else entirely?
Reply to this email or comment below and let me know! I really do read every single reply, and your feedback is shaping how I build this community.
Keep your eyes on your inbox! I’ll be unveiling the Collective very soon!
With you on your journey to recovery,Dr. Dylan Wells, PT, DPT, OCS, CSCS Founder of MoveWells LLC | Creator of Migraine Renaissance Weekly
👋 P.S. If you’re feeling stuck in the daily cycle and want more personalized support to navigate your migraine recovery journey, you can click here to book a free demo call [https://move-wells.com/book-a-call] with me. You don’t have to do this alone!
✉️ P.P.S. If someone you know is struggling with issues like this, please consider sending it to them. It could be the thing they’ve been missing in their recovery for years.
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