A guest post by Kate, CEO of Headway Cambridgeshire, of which I am a trustee.

Kate suffered excruciating migraines for many years until she took part in a trial using a well known herb organised by the Migraine Action Association which has transformed her life. Her story is to be published in She magazine, but you can read it here first:

I started suffering from migraine when I was about 18 and for the following 7 or so years my life was not ruled, but considerably influenced, by the effects of my condition.  Migraines would mean 12 to 18 hours of excruciating pain and repeated vomiting – during which it was impossible for me to do anything but lie in bed, waiting for it to pass. 

My migraines were from the start stress or excitement related – with the sad consequence that I often missed big social occasions that I had really been looking forward to, and I have left more parties early, and cancelled more arrangements with my long-suffering friends than I care to remember. 

Because I vomited so much, none of the medications that are taken orally would work, so when one drug called Imigran was developed to be taken as an injection into the thigh, my life was revolutionised.  I didn’t stop getting migraines, but when I did, a jab of Imigran and a quick lie down meant I could be back up and running in an hour or two.  This continued until few years ago when I noticed that, whilst the Imigran injections were still working, my migraines were becoming more frequent and would ‘bounce back’ – leaving me taking more Imigran to get rid of an attack. 

 As well as a visit to a consultant at Addenbrooke’s who reassured me and prescribed a sophisticated new drug that melts on the tongue and so is absorbed through the lining of the mouth, I also embarked on a 3-month trial of a herb called Feverfew, organised by the Migraine Action Association, a migraine support group that I have long been a member of. 

I cannot explain the results – and am open to the suggestion that it is all mind over matter, who cares? – but from the day I started taking Feverfew the frequency of my migraine attacks has reduced more than I can quantify – I would almost say that I am no longer a migraine sufferer. 

Feverfew is a fairly well-known and commonplace herb as far as I know – it is certainly readily available in Boots – and has had no other side effects on me, apart from the very welcome one of almost eliminating my migraine attacks.  Before I started taking it in autumn 2005 I was having roughly one migraine every 10 days or so and probably using 2 or 3 Imigran injections to shift it, I was also probably making things worse for myself by desperately trying to ‘keep going’ at work and not taking the time off I needed to really recover.  To tell you when I last had a migraine I’ve just had to look in my diary to remind myself – it was 26 April – and before that ….. I can’t remember!