Migraine

Migraine

MIGRAINE HEADACHE RELIEF: BOTOX®, NERVE BLOCKS & SURGERY

Migraine headaches and other forms of scalp pain are extremely common in the United States, with 28 million people suffering with this condition. Over 9 million of these migraine patients are NOT helped by medications, but may be aided by other interventions: Nerve Blocks, Botox and/or Surgery. A trial of nerve blocks or Botox to specific muscles of the face, scalp, and / or head can temporarily halt the triggers for migraines. Dr. Rosenberg takes this concept one step further, when indicated, by decompressing or removing the nerves that trigger the migraines. 

MIGRAINE TREATMENT TESTIMONIALS

Beverly Hills surgeon David Rosenberg, MD, has spent a year of fellowship studying peripheral nerve surgery, and his expertise applies the anatomical knowledge and skill derived from this additional training to accurately place Botox and / or nerve blocks, and to surgically decompress or remove sensory nerves for patients who desire a more permanent solution to their migraine headaches.

Migraine FAQs

If you have rare headaches, and they do not impair your daily routines, Botox and / or surgical intervention are probably not worth pursuing. If you have chronic migraines, significant worsening of a lifelong headache pattern; headache following trauma, or sudden onset of severe headaches, you should consult with a neurologist or our office. We recommend discussing a referral with your primary care doctor or neurologist and have a full evaluation, or discuss a Botox injection or nerve block with Dr. Rosenberg; it will give you a clear idea of whether or not our clinic might be able to help. Botox will also eliminate (for a 3-4 month period) the wrinkles of your lower central brow region, an added bonus, but of course, not the primary goal of headache treatment.

For many patients, migraines / chronic headache lead to years of suffering, lost work, and loss of family activities. Migraines / chronic headaches can impact every facet of a person’s life. Also, many of the medications used to treat head pain can have major side effects. If you find yourself in this severe category, you have likely seen multiple specialists, had many tests/evaluations, and tried a wide variety of drugs, acupuncture, etc. The clinic at Rosenberg Plastic Surgery treats migraines / headaches by determining whether your pain seems related to a particular type of nerve compression syndrome caused by small muscles in the region of the brows and/or at the base of the skull, and to offer you treatment if this seems to be the case. This is a part of the peripheral nerve surgery treatment that Dr. Rosenberg is already focused on providing. Fortunately, recent research demonstrates that many patients with chronic head pain experience relief when specific muscles are weakened temporarily with Botox, and surgery by Dr. Rosenberg offers a more-permanent solution for most of these patients. Success rates for migraine patients are approximately 80%.

Botox works in several ways to help improve the symptoms of migraines and chronic headaches. First, it weakens the muscles temporarily which are linked to triggering the headaches. There is also likely a direct effect on the nerve innervating those muscles, helping to reduce the incidence of headache triggering. Botox injection is a test to determine if those muscles and nerves are causing your pain, and a preview of what you might expect to experience from one or more of the surgical procedures discussed here in more detail.

Just as patients are the best judges of the severity of their head problems, patients are the best judges of the benefit of the Botox blocks. We attempt to objectively quantify the pre-treatment severity of head pain, as well as its response to our various treatments, but ultimately patients tell us when it’s time to try Botox, when it’s time to discuss surgical treatment, and whether or not we have been helpful to them.

Botox has been prominent in the media since the late ‘90’s, most frequently for its ability to weaken small muscles of the face and neck that cause the wrinkles and furrows of aging. This drug is actually called a neurotoxin , indicating that it interferes with the normal function of the neuromuscular junction (connection between nerves and their associated muscles). Just as a local anesthetic such as Xylocaine interrupts pain signals going to the brain, Botox blocks transmission of the nerve impulse that causes a muscle to contract. Depending on the dose and distribution of Botox, the muscle is typically weakened or paralyzed for 2-3 months. A permanent loss of muscle function has never been reported, and the FDA has endorsed the safety of the drug by approving it for use in the muscles of the eye and many other parts of the body, and to treat wrinkles in the eyebrow region.

In the course of treating wrinkles physicians noticed a surprising extra benefit of the drug: Some patients whose brows were injected for wrinkles noted that their headaches disappeared! Based on these findings, further research has been done. In its simplest terms, decompressing these nerve branches by paralyzing muscles that were irritating them might be comparable to doing a carpal tunnel release, or for example, loosening a tie that’s too tight. Some migraine headaches may be triggered by a simple mechanical problem, the compression of a nerve in the brow or posterior scalp.

Plastic surgeon Dr. Bahman Guyuron in Cleveland, first published in 2000 his observation that a specific maneuver performed routinely in cosmetic surgery known as a “brow-lift” also appeared to improve or eliminate chronic headache problems in a large majority of his patients who had experienced head pain before their surgery ( Guyuron B, et al., Corrugator supercilii muscle resection and migraine headaches. Plast Reconstr Surg. 2000). These were not patients having surgery for headache; they were patients having brow-lifts to eliminate forehead wrinkles. Elimination of their head pain was an unexpected bonus. The muscles removed or weakened are the corrugatosr and procerus, and their treatment is most likely to assist patients whose headache is primarily in the forehead region.

Sometimes the trigger spot for a migraine is the back of the head. The major nerve in question in the back of the head is the greater occipital nerve. Other nerves that can be involved include the lesser occipital nerve and the third occipital nerve. The semispinalis capitis can compress these nerves are the only muscles which typically surround the nerves; using Botox to temporarily relax their compression of the occipital nerves is a specific test in helping to determine the cause of head pain in the back of the head, and elsewhere. If Botox is of significant help, its use may be repeated at intervals of 2-3 months or surgical removal of part of the semispinalis may give more permanent relief.

One complication of Botox therapy in the brow region is unbalanced muscle weakening. This could alter the position of the brows or eyelids and make them asymmetrical. These changes are temporary, as Botox is always temporary, but could last several months and be distressing. These asymmetries are rare. If we block the small muscles of the brow, you will note smoothing of the forehead and mid-brow. Rarely, the Botox can migrate down toward the muscles controlling the upper eyelid, paralyzing them slightly and causing the upper lid to droop. Finally, the Botox may simply not help, which is upsetting but not itself a complication.

In the course of treating wrinkles physicians noticed a surprising extra benefit of the drug: Some patients whose brows were injected for wrinkles noted that their headaches disappeared! Based on these findings, further research has been done. In its simplest terms, decompressing these nerve branches by paralyzing muscles that were irritating them might be comparable to doing a carpal tunnel release, or for example, loosening a tie that’s too tight. Some migraine headaches may be triggered by a simple mechanical problem, the compression of a nerve in the brow or posterior scalp.

Plastic surgeon Dr. Bahman Guyuron in Cleveland, first published in 2000 his observation that a specific maneuver performed routinely in cosmetic surgery known as a “brow-lift” also appeared to improve or eliminate chronic headache problems in a large majority of his patients who had experienced head pain before their surgery ( Guyuron B, et al., Corrugator supercilii muscle resection and migraine headaches. Plast Reconstr Surg. 2000). These were not patients having surgery for headache; they were patients having brow-lifts to eliminate forehead wrinkles. Elimination of their head pain was an unexpected bonus. The muscles removed or weakened are the corrugatosr and procerus, and their treatment is most likely to assist patients whose headache is primarily in the forehead region.

Sometimes the trigger spot for a migraine is the back of the head. The major nerve in question in the back of the head is the greater occipital nerve. Other nerves that can be involved include the lesser occipital nerve and the third occipital nerve. The semispinalis capitis can compress these nerves are the only muscles which typically surround the nerves; using Botox to temporarily relax their compression of the occipital nerves is a specific test in helping to determine the cause of head pain in the back of the head, and elsewhere. If Botox is of significant help, its use may be repeated at intervals of 2-3 months or surgical removal of part of the semispinalis may give more permanent relief.

For patients who have nerve compression or nerve injury as the reason for their migraines / chronic headaches, Dr. Rosenberg performs a trial of putting the nerve to sleep with a nerve block of local anesthetic (like the Novacaine used at the dentist’s office). If this results in a decrease or complete stopping of a patient’s migraines / chronic headaches, then we know there is a high likelihood that decompressing or resecting the nerve. So Dr. Rosenberg uses the nerve block as a DIAGNOSTIC test. It is not meant as a chronic treatment for migraines.

The type of nerve block we do uses a medication called Marcaine (generic name Bupivicaine). It typically wears off in 4-6 hours, but patients have had relief from headaches from anywhere from 3-14 days.

There may be tenderness at the injection site for 24 hours. Bruising may sometimes occur, and we ask that you avoid taking aspirin or anti-inflammatory medications (Advil, Motrin) for 10 days prior to your visit. Tylenol, however, is safe to take, as it does not increase the risk of bleeding / bruising.

Depending on the location / focus of your headaches, different approaches are used. For headaches focused in the brow/forehead region, the muscles known as the corrugator supercilli are gently removed. These are the muscles that assist in creating a “frowned” appearance, so one side effect of the surgery is fewer frown lines. Dr. Rosenberg also looks for other sites of compression or damage of the supraorbital or supratrochlear nerves, which may be related to the triggering of migraine headaches.

 

For temporal headaches, Dr. Rosenberg locates the zygomaticotemporal nerves, which are resected and buried in the temporalis muscle.

 

For occipital headaches, a small incision is made by Dr. Rosenberg, over the back of the head, hidden within the hair. The greater occipital nerves, and in some cases the lesser and / or 3rd occipital nerves are located and decompressed.

 

All of these surgeries are similar to other peripheral nerves surgeries performed at the Institute of Peripheral Nerve Surgery. Dr. Rosenberg identifies injured or compressed nerves, using meticulous microsurgical technique, with the aim of restoring the patient back to normal function.

Some pain management centers place nerve stimulators into the nerves to control migraine headaches. That is about a $30,000 battery implanted in you with a couple feet of wires that get placed next to your nerves. It can confuse the nerve and minimize the pain. With placement of foreign material, such as the battery and wires, there is risk of the hardware getting infected. Also, patients can feel the batteries and sometimes find them uncomfortable. Also, nerve stimulators are not treating the cause of the problem but just fooling with the symptoms. It is certainly another option for pain control, and may end up being a treatment you seek, but may not be the best option for you.

Recovery from migraine headache surgery with Dr. Rosenberg varies depending on the area which is being operated on. In the brow / forehead, swelling may persist from as little as 2 weeks to as long as 6 weeks, depending on the individual. Swelling from surgery in the temporal or occipital regions (side and back of the head) is much less noticeable since it is hidden by hair, typically. You may shower and wash hair two days after surgery and thereafter.. Pain medication is usually necessary for the first 3-5 days, due to incisional pain.

The cutting-edge techniques in migraine / head pain management that we provide (Botox, nerve blocks and surgery) are not considered “covered services” by some insurance companies, and your insurance company may not provide any reimbursement for them. You may therefore be required to pay “out-of-pocket” for these procedures. We are happy to provide documentation of our evaluation and care to insurance companies, complete with diagnostic and treatment codes. However, if your insurance company denies coverage, the patient is responsible for payment. Office charges must be paid at the time of your visit, and surgical fees must be paid at least two weeks in advance of your surgery date.

 

Plastic surgeon Dr. David Rosenberg performs innovative surgical procedures to treat migraine chronic headaches, offering relief and hope with highly successful treatments performed in Beverly Hills.

Migraine Headache Treatment – Botox Injection Procedure – Beverly Hills Plastic Surgeon Dr. David Rosenberg
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