English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Also, any idea what causes them?

2007-02-27 04:00:48 · 3 answers · asked by rockout 2 in Health Other - Health

3 answers

Funny you should ask. I recently saw my opthamologist for the very same thing. Of course, when I went to him, I had no idea I had OM's. As a migraine sufferer, I'm accustomed to headache pain...this phenomenom, however, involved no pain whatsoever! What drove me to seek medical attention was that while I'd be asleep, shocking spurts of bright white light would explode behind my closed eyelids, startle the crap out of me & wake me up from a dead sleep. I don't like anything messing w/my sleeptime, so I made an appt. to see the doctor. Anyway, he diagnosed ocular migraines. He also said that since they're usually not accompanied by pain, there's really no medical treatment prescribed. He told me to ignore them, that the episodes would pass (they did) & be glad that they weren't a typical head-splitting, debilitating migraine headache! He said causes for them are the same as for regular migraine -- certain foods, alcohol, hormone fluctuations, etc. Does that help?

2007-02-27 04:10:15 · answer #1 · answered by napqueen 6 · 0 0

sinuses,
without medication you can attempt to increase water intake, get out of areas with extremes in weather and/or pollen.
also they can be caused by strain, so chill and blink while playing halo.
also diet, and sleep habits will contribute to their formation.

and if you go the whole "its all in your head" approch, simply close your eyes and move your fingers from your eyes to the back of the head and imagine pushing the pain from your body.


if nothing else works shoot up some morphine. (not really)

2007-02-27 04:10:17 · answer #2 · answered by Lynx 2 · 0 0

http://www.neurologyreviews.com/feb04/nr_feb04_foramen.html

2007-02-27 13:33:36 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers