Recognising migraines

Four phases. Most people only know one.

The headache is usually the only part of a migraine attack that people mention. There is often a phase that precedes it, sometimes an aura on top of it, and there is always a recovery phase afterwards that can be just as exhausting as the pain itself.

Important in advance: this page will help you prepare for the conversation with your doctor. It's not a diagnosis. Persistent or changing headaches, headaches that are new after the age of forty, or headaches with fever, loss of strength or confusion should always be assessed by a doctor.
The characteristics

What often occurs together

Not every characteristic has to be correct, but together they form a recognizable picture.

🔔 It prodrome

Hours to a day before the pain: fatigue, yawning, cravings for sweets, mood swings. Most people only recognise this afterwards as part of the attack.

✨ The aura (not for everyone)

About 1 in 3 people get temporary visual symptoms such as zigzag lines, flickering or blind spots, sometimes tingling just before or at the onset of the pain.

⚡ The headache phase

Throbbing, often one-sided pain that worsens with movement, usually with nausea and hypersensitivity to light and sound. Untreated 4 to 72 hours.

🏓 The postdrome

After the pain: exhaustion, loss of concentration, sensitivity to stimuli. Many people underestimate how limiting this recovery phase is.

📋 Fixed triggers or a diary

Sleep deprivation, certain diet, stress (or the relaxation afterwards), hormonal fluctuations: a headache diary helps make patterns visible.

⏰ Taking medication more than 10 to 15 days per month

If you reach for painkillers more often than that, that itself is a signal to discuss with your GP, not something to continue quietly.

When to be extra alert

This is not an ordinary migraine, seek immediate care help

Sudden, unprecedentedly severe headache ('thunderclap'), headache with fever and neck stiffness, headache after a fall or blow to the head, or headache with confusion, loss of strength or speech problems: seek immediate medical help, this may be something other than migraine.

🏎 Need immediate help?

In case of immediate danger to yourself or someone else: call 112. Are you in distress or are you thinking about suicide? You can call or chat with 113 Suicide Prevention day and night via 0800-0113. Zorgfuik is not a crisis service and cannot solve acute requests for help, but we think it is important that you know where you can go.