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Conditions unexpected!

Though I have to face the reality, I had not expected that my two precious weekend days will rot just due to migraine....trying to confiscate myself. Let's have a update fever blogs around 100 and medication sometimes goes on its way.
 
I googled migraine last night to check if any one could help me or is something being done to migrained people like on the web, on the blogger, or elsewhere. I just searched define: migraine to produce these results.
 

Definitions of migraine on the Web:

  • A disorder characterized by recurrent moderate to severe headaches that may be accompanied by dizziness, nausea, vomiting or extreme sensitivity to light and sound.
    www.cnn.com/HEALTH/library/BN/00023.html

  • A particular form of recurrent headache that often runs in families. According to the International Headache Society, migraine headache pain must have four of the following characteristics: one-sided, pulsating or throbbing, at least moderate if not severe, and worsened by ordinary daily activities such as climbing stairs or housework. In addition, the pain must be accompanied by either nausea or else sensitivity to light and noise. ...
    www.achenet.org/resources/glossary.php

  • A headache characterized by throbbing head pain, often greater on one side; may be preceded by a warning (aura) and accompanied by nausea, vomiting, and sensitivity to light and sound; in rare cases, weakness, language problems, or other neurologic disorders are associated with migraine.
    professionals.epilepsy.com/page/glossary.html

  • A headache syndrome characterized by throbbing, usually one sided pain, that may be associated with nausea, vomiting and visual disturbances.
    www.advmedny.com/glossary.html

  • a severe headache, usually accompanied by vision problems and/or nausea and vomiting, and that typically recurs
    www.american-depot.com/services/resources_gl_m.asp

  • An often familial symptom complex of periodic attacks of vascular headache, usually temporal and unilateral in onset, commonly associated with irritability, nausea, vomiting, constipation or diarrhea, and often photophobia. Attacks are preceded by constriction of the cranial arteries, often with resultant prodromal sensory (especially ocular) symptoms and the spreading depression of Leão; the migraines themselves commence with the vasodilation that follows. [Dorland]
    www.antiquusmorbus.com/English/EnglishM.htm

  • is a type of recurring headache that involves blood vessels, nerves, and brain chemicals. Sensations such as visual changes, called auras, may precede a migraine. The International Headache Society recently developed a new system that classifies migraines as one of two types: migraine occurring with an aura (formerly called “classic”) and migraine occurring without an aura (formerly called “common"). Migraines may occur several times a week or once every couple of years. ...
    www.wellnessctr.org/body.cfm

  • a vascular headache believed to be caused by blood flow changes and certain chemical changes in the brain leading to a cascade of events — including constriction of arteries supplying blood to the brain and the release of certain brain chemicals — that result in severe head pain, stomach upset, and visual disturbances.
    www.migraineaway.com/June52001/migraineglossary.html

  • a severe headache, usually in females, that causes vasodilatation of the arteries and veins in the head; etiology can be nerves, hormones, glands, diet or stress; at least 12 varieties established.
    www.ecdoctors.com/glossary.htm

  • a severe recurring vascular headache; occurs more frequently in women than men
    wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn

  • Migraine is a form of headache, usually very intense and disabling. It is a neurologic disease of neuronal origin. The word "migraine" comes from the Greek construction hemikranion (pain affecting one side of the head).
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Migraine

  • Migraine is the first book written by Oliver Sacks, the well known neurologist and author with a practice in New York City. The book was first published in 1970 and revised in 1992.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Migraine_(book)