HeadWise

National Headache Foundation

A podcast about the latest news on migraine disease and headache disorders.

  1. 17 DEC

    Do Viral Migraine Remedies Work? Breaking Down the Science ft. Fred Cohen, MD

    In this episode of HeadWise™, host Lindsay Weitzel, PhD, talks with headache specialist Fred Cohen, MD, about the viral migraine remedies circulating on TikTok, Instagram, and social media — and whether any of them are actually helpful. Together, they break down popular home remedies and “migraine hacks,” explaining which approaches may offer real relief, which lack evidence, and which could potentially cause harm. Dr. Cohen shares the science behind commonly discussed strategies like caffeine, cold and warm compresses, salt cravings, topical treatments, neuromodulation, and cannabis, while also addressing more extreme trends such as mustard on the feet, banana peels, hair cutting, and specialty ear piercings. This episode emphasizes that migraine is a neurological disease, not a condition solved by a one-size-fits-all fix. What works for one person may not work for another — and some remedies deserve a closer look before trying them. In this episode, you’ll learn: - Why caffeine can help some migraine attacks but trigger others - How cold and warm therapies may influence pain pathways - Which viral remedies lack scientific evidence - What the research says about cannabis and migraine relief - When neuromodulation may be a safer, evidence-based option - Why talking with your healthcare provider about home remedies matters If you’ve ever wondered whether social media migraine tips are worth trying, this episode offers clear, practical guidance grounded in medical expertise.

    25 min
  2. 10 DEC

    Is Migraine a Systemic Disease? ft. Vincent Martin, MD

    In this episode of HeadWise™, host Lindsay Weitzel, PhD, talks with Vincent Martin, MD—director of the Headache and Facial Pain Center at the University of Cincinnati—about a foundational and evolving question in headache medicine: Is migraine a systemic disease? Dr. Martin explains why migraine is not always a single neurological disorder and how emerging genetic and population-based research is revealing that only about half of migraine risk is inherited. He discusses how certain environmental factors—including head trauma, respiratory and immune-related conditions, and even gastrointestinal disorders—may contribute to developing migraine disease or increasing migraine frequency over time. They explore: • Why migraine may be neurologic, vascular, or influenced by other systemic conditions • What Mendelian randomization studies reveal about diseases that may actually cause migraine • How depression, asthma, autoimmune disease, IBS, and celiac disease intersect with migraine • Why people sometimes develop migraine later in life after injury or physiological change • The difference between what causes migraine disease versus what triggers an attack • How whole-person clinical evaluation may change migraine diagnosis and management This conversation offers clarity on a topic many people have sensed but lacked language for—why migraine often feels like more than “just head pain”—and presents a science-based understanding of how the brain, immune system, vascular function, and other organ systems interact in migraine disease.

    18 min
  3. 25 NOV

    Cerebral Venous Congestion and Headache ft. Ferdinand Hui, MD

    In this episode of HeadWise™, host Lindsay Weitzel, PhD, talks with Ferdinand Hui, MD, Medical Director of Neuro-Interventional Surgery at the University of Hawaii, about cerebral venous congestion—an emerging and often misunderstood contributor to persistent head pressure, visual symptoms, and chronic daily head pain. Dr. Hui explains how impaired venous outflow can disrupt the brain’s “waste-clearing” system, why anatomical compression points can create significant symptoms, and how this evolving disease model overlaps with conditions such as idiopathic intracranial hypertension. He also shares why many people with long-standing, daily head pain may have been miscategorized—and how engineering principles are helping researchers rethink these disorders. They explore: • What cerebral venous congestion is (and why the theory is gaining traction) • How structural compression and venous narrowing contribute to head pressure and pain • Why cerebral venous congestion symptoms can mimic migraine disease in some individuals • The role of connective tissue disorders in venous flow problems • How venous drainage, CSF pressure, and intracranial dynamics interact • When surgery may be considered for cerebral venous congestion and why diagnosis must be extremely precise This episode sheds light on a rapidly developing area of neurology—one that may help explain symptoms that many people have struggled to name—while offering a clear, science-driven look at how venous congestion affects head pain, vision, and overall brain function.

    36 min

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A podcast about the latest news on migraine disease and headache disorders.

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