"But there again there’s another bit of a paradigm shift; we had all thought that migraine came in through the trigeminal nerve or was mediated by input from the face, but now there’s really growing recognition that the occipital nerve, the upper cervical nerve routes may actually be playing an equally important role and many, many migraine patients get neck pain either before, during or after their attack they have soreness and stiffness in their neck."
Dr Andrew Charles - Neurologist, UCLA
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AuthorRoger O'Toole is the Director and Senior Clinician of the Melbourne Headache Clinic and has over 10 years experience as a physiotherapist. Archives
January 2020
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