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Well, the first place to start is for her to see a doctor. They will probably start with a CT or MRI of the head to make sure there's not a physical cause for the headaches. Once that is eliminated, then it may be necessary to see a specialist in migraines.
If a patient has severe headaches that occur frequently, a referral to a neurologist who specializes in headaches is the next step. The specialist will determine what kind of headache the patient is having: migraines are different from cluster headaches which are different from tension headaches. Once the type of headache is determined, then testing and treatment can start. Even with treatment, the headaches still occur; the goal is to lessen the number of headaches and the severity.
The treatment will focus upon 1) prevention and 2) trying different "rescue meds".
Prevention has two tactics: finding what triggers the headaches and trying different medications to prevent a migraine from starting. Migraine triggers are very unique to every person- some people are triggered by weather changes, certain foods, menstrual cycles, sleep disturbances, allergies, etc. It's up to the patient to keep a headache diary and then look for things that might be triggering the headaches. For example, a patient might notice that eating chocolate or drinking red wine might precede a migraine and then they try stopping and starting both chocolate and red wine to confirm that is a trigger. Once the triggers are identified, it's a matter of avoiding as many of the triggers as possible.
In terms of medications: There are preventative medications like antidepressants, betablockers, calcium channel blockers and anti-seizure medications that the physician might try. Sometimes these medications work and other times the patient finds that the side effects make the medications intolerable. There are also "rescue medications" that the physician may also prescribe; these are medications that stop the migraine once it has started.
