And now for something entirely different:
A few years ago, when I went in for my annual checkup at the doctor's office, I got some news. No, it wasn't the earth-shattering sort of news that most people eventually hear from a doctor. But it was news.
When he came to the end of his questionnaire, the doctor asked, "Is there something you want to ask me about?"
"Yes." I said. "Every once in a while, I get a headache that Ibuprofen just can't handle. The pain usually settles right behind one of my eyes. It's pretty intense."
"And do you notice that when you get these headaches, your eyes are sensitive to light, and that sunlight is especially hard to take?" he asked.
"Yeah. That's it exactly."
So he told me: "You've been having the textbook type of migraine headache."
He prescribed Imitrex, a common migraine medication. I took one pill the first time those symptoms showed up again, and within an hour or so the pain began to go away. The medicine did have a couple of funky side effects (feeling out-of-it, sort of woozy; feeling like a 5-pound weight was on my shoulders). But those were much better than the migraine.
A year or so later, I moved to West Texas. Immediately, instead of having one or two migraines a month, it was more like five or six.
Six months later, I was having Sunday lunch with several people from church. One of them is a nursing student who, at the time, was taking a course in nutrition. When I told him about how the migraines were coming more and more frequently, this unassuming, slow-to-speak man looked straight at me and emphatically said, "Stop eating beef."
It just so happened that at that moment, as I remember it, my mouth was full of some of the best-tasting brisket ever. So once I got past one of those awkward moments where the conversation is waiting for you to chew and swallow, I asked him, "Why?"
"Well," he said, "it's kind of complicated. Just do it."
"You think there's some sort of connection between my eating beef and getting migraine headaches?"
"If I were a bettin' man, . . . " he said.
Within a day or so, it dawned on me that my eating habits had changed, even more than I realized, after having moved from Connecticut to Texas. Living in Amarillo, I was now in cattle country, the land of beef. And I'd been eating a lot more of it ever since. Anyway, in response to my friend's advice, when it came to beef, I went cold turkey. Reluctantly.
That was July of last year. Ever since then, my migraines have decreased in frequency by about half. Not only that, but the two times I've put the theory to the test and have eaten a steak or a burger, no later than the next morning I've felt that terrible, familiar feeling.
I'm relating all of this for whatever help it might be to someone else. But I'm also bringing up the subject because I want to hear what works for other people (or people you know) who have suffered with migraines. They still come around. I hate them. And I want to do whatever I can to prevent them, if possible.
I need to stop here, but want to write about this another time because I've recently read of something else that can possibly help with migraines. Be well.
If my memory is right sugar can be another one that can get you.
ReplyDeleteYou should be careful when it comes to beef. You could end up like Oprah and in a court of law defending your free speech rights! :o)
ReplyDeleteBeef and IB and soda is the only things that helping with my migraines I was prescribed Imitrex and it doesn't do anything
DeleteHi Frank,
ReplyDeleteI just found your blog by searching on google for "migraines from beef?"
Ive been eating beef since childhood,
and ever since first grade ive gotten terrible migraines, and they never know why, imitrex worked a couple times, but no more.
the past 2 years or so ive been trying to eat better, way less meat and what not, but ive noticed, the past hmm.. 7-10 times or so, whnever i eat beef, shortly after the migraine comes, no matter what kind of beef.
so i didnt eat it for 2 months, and i had one small headache during that period, and i finally decided to see what would happen if i tried it again.
i ate beef...... an hour or two later it started, and it was getting worse and worse.
that's it. lol
I am now positive beef does indeed trigger awful headaches, in mot just me, but others as well.
crazy!! lol
my mom used to think i would say it cuz i didnt like it!!
but i did like it!! lol
it just tears my head to shreds,
and it lasts for days and days sometimes. no thank you. lol
Thanks for the blog. Peace
I've noticed it's not only hamburger meat, and other red meats, but it's also pork,and certain greasy chips can cause me to have a terrible headache, when I wake up in the morning, it may last for a couple days. So I think it must be something to do with fatty bad oils,because oils like avocados and peanut don't seem to bother me, so maybe it has something to do with bad cholesterol. I don't know just giving my input also.
Deleteohhh, also...
ReplyDeletei know some people are just to dead set against any kind of "mind altering" substances,
but there are plenty of studies to show that cannabis can help fight migraines very well... ive found this to be true in my own studies.
( but ive also had it have theopposite effect and make it worse).
Also, another safe, natural substance that is even better for shrinking migraines down to zero, is mushrooms, ....to be more precise. ..the kind that contain psilocybin .
If you do a quick search, youll be amazed at the studies and what they show, and a very very small dose, ( minimal to zero mind altering effect), does some amazing things for vaso-dilation.
;) hope that helps somebody, anybody, who suffers from these.
Blessings
I've suffered from migraines for about 20 years. For awhile I took a prescription drug, but my pharmacist said I was having to take it too often and it was bad for me, so in desperation I tried Excedrin Migraine and it worked like a charm. I've now learned that if I catch it early I can get it to stop quicker.
ReplyDeleteBut the reason I came to your blog was because my son has started noticing that he gets a headache when he eats beef. And I had never heard of that causing migraines before. It isn't all kinds of beef though. It's usually when we have roast beef, not ground beef. Is that the same with you? What is it about beef that causes it? Do you think there would be a difference if you tried free range beef? I might try that for him. He loves beef.
I've also heard that our minds can learn that they usually get a migraine in a certain situation and then that situation will become a trigger. For instance, I've gotten a migraine at a concert few times. Now when I plan to go to a concert I start getting an aura and migraine before I even get there. Weird!!
Hi Laura,
ReplyDeleteFor me, any sort of beef is an absolute trigger. I've had it two or three times in the last 4 years or so and it's always the same. As we know, red meat isn't the best thing for people to ingest anyway. But I sure do miss steaks and cheeseburgers.
I found this blog from searching "beef gives me a headache" because I was wondering if that was true for anyone else! Apparently so.
ReplyDeleteHi- I see this is a few years old, I just googled "headache after eating beef." I have had this exact symptom my entire life, and was considered "allergic to beef" as a child. I was required to avoid red food coloring and gelatin (Jello, marshmallows, etc.) as well as beef. When did eat beef, I would get a migraine within a couple of hours of eating. My mom would give me Tylenol and rub my back until I fell asleep, and by the time I woke up the next morning it was gone.
ReplyDeleteAround the age of 15 or 16, it started to fade a little. The reaction was just as bad, but it wouldn't happen every time I had beef. As an adult, I've tried to pay attention, and I have noticed that when I am well hydrated and have eaten healthy that day, it is less likely that I will react. So if I know I'm craving a steak, I'll drink a lot of water and eat mostly fresh fruits and veggies during the day, and I find if I don't do that too often, I can have a steak without a reaction.
If you are still reading comments on this topic, I hope that helps!
I am sure that when I eat beef a headache will follow...had to give it up
ReplyDeleteI ate some ground beef soup over the weekend. Shortly after eating it, I got a migraine. I am giving up beef this week to make sure whether it's a trigger. I get migraines several times a week and I am working on eliminating as many triggers as possible.
ReplyDeleteCreative,
ReplyDeleteI think you'll find that by eliminating beef, you will lessen the number of your migraines.
Since writing this post, I've also discovered that migraines can be related to high blood pressure too. Be well.
For me it wasn't the beef but the MEAT TENDERIZER. Once I stopped adding powdered meat tenderizer, my migraine/headaches stopped.
ReplyDeleteIt hasn't always been this way, but I've discovered the last two years that beef in any form is a definite cause of migraine for me. I'm a 45 year old male, migraines since age 12 or so. It used to be just eating a big steak was a problem, so I stopped eating steaks 8 years ago or so. The last couple of years, any form of beef ( even hotdogs ) will bring on a migraine. With NO beef in my diet I have gone from 2 bad migraines a month to only 3 or 4 per year.
ReplyDeleteHi, Anonymous.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comment here. Your experience sounds very similar to mine.
Not that I eat a lot of hotdogs, but if and when you want to there are the turkey, chicken, and pork varieties.
Also, a turkey burger hot off the grill makes me nearly as happy as beef used to.
Be well.
Well, I have found that "real" beef is much better than the processed kind like hot dogs and sausage, which consistently contain glutamate, which is a well-known migraine trigger, either as MSG or "hydrolyzed soy protein" or "natural flavoring." That said, whole beef does give me migraine-like pain in the neck when I wake up in the morning. Keep in mind that migraine triggers are cumulative, so if you're still having them, you're eating something else that's a trigger. The most common suspects are fermented milk products (cheese, yogurt, sour cream) and yeast (an ingredient in many processed foods). The common denominator is that these "foods" contain high quantities of free glutamic acid (a constituent of protein) which, when mixed with salt, form Monosodium Glutamate.
ReplyDeleteThis, this, this. I found out MSG is HORRIBLE for me. Not only does it cause migraines for me but I feel so SICKLY and tired after I eat it. Eliminating this poison has helped me tremendously.
DeleteThank you! People think I am crazy, but everytime I eat red meat, I get a horrible migraine. I am glad to find others that suffer from the same thing.
ReplyDeleteAnonymous,
ReplyDeleteWhat this means is that you should avoid any beef all the time. Even something as seemingly harmless as meat sauce on spaghetti is likely to give you a headache. Turkey and chicken are the only meats that I will eat anymore. Be well.
I have been having migraine kind of headache too. And any type of over the counter meds. won't work on my headache, it pounds on my temple, eyes hurt and back of the neck hurts bad as well.
ReplyDeleteJust couple days back, I made burgers at home... after eating that, I had this headache, which I haven't had for couple of months. I took Tylenol and it went away the next morning.
This evening I made goat meat soup, after eating it it gave me headache (mild), I realized that if I eat any kind of red meat, it will trigger my migraine, so I am going to avoid eating them, not that I am against beef or goat meat, I love them. And I am a any kind of meat lover. Thanks everyone for posting, it sure helped me, I am not the only one.
On top of that, I might have blood pressure (not in meds.) but I do have to watch it. Red meat triggers blood pressure, someone told me that. Live well, stay healthy!
Just like everyone else has stated I also googled "does eating meat give you a headache". I am sp pleased that I am not alone with this problem.
ReplyDeleteA while back I went through a phase where every month I would cut something out of my diet to see how I felt. I felt the best not eating meat. So I started not eating meat and went about 3 months.
I decided to try meat again and my first experience I got one of my horriable headaches again. I tried meat again and the same thing. I did't realize it but when I thought back I did not have any headaches for the 3 months I wasn't eating meat. It then dawned on me that this could be the problem. I hope it is and I will stop eating meat to see if it helps.
Granted I did eat fish the whole time and never had any issues, I see meat as beef, pork and chicken. I have a theory that chicken might be ok but not sure.
I get the opposite effect. I've had migraines several times a week for about 8 years (started in high school). Triggers were usually hunger, lack of sleep, or acute stress of some kind. I treated them with a combination of imitrex, ibuprofen, hot showers, ice packs, compression and laying in a quiet dark room. I tried to treat them by eating--anything. Foods were usually not a trigger, and since hunger was a trigger, I figured I should eat whatever I can. I never thought of beef, and I never usually ate beef, but one day I ate a huge steak and the migraine cleared in about an hour. Now, whenever I get a migraine I eat a large steak and it usually helps. Weird.
ReplyDeleteMe too. Beef helps some of my migraines go away. Depends on the cause of the migraines, as not all migraines are the same or caused by food. Women need iron, and beef has more iron than chicken. Depends on how the cow was raised though. Organic free range beef is the best.
DeleteYes, its the beef:-(
ReplyDeleteBeef migraines can actually be caused by a tick bite. You need to stop eating ALL cow products (milk, cheese, bouillon in soups, even some gelatin made from beef cartlige) to avoid the migraines altogether. Treat it like an allergy and avoid it at all costs.
ReplyDeleteHope this helps.
hi mr.frank my name is anna im a born again christian, im very thinkfull that i found your blog i got very bad migraines some time i wake up in the morning i feel very pain,sometimes i cry, or sometime midle of the night i crying bcoz of pain....and just now i eat beef after 3 hours i feel my head very pain. thats why i search about beef if i can eat. thanks so much God bless you.
ReplyDeleteI have been a migraine sufferer for for 36 years! Icouldn't believe that dropping all meats cold turkey would make ALL OF migraines go away.... A breakthrough for me and hopefully many migraine sufferers. Do NOT eat ANY type of meats, NONE! Consume 400mg of Magnesium Glacenate and 200mg mg B2 per day, and you will have a new life MIGRAINE FREE! Eat clean and organic, drink water equivallent to half of your weight in ounces. Blessings!
DeleteWow......I just googled thiss..because my mom made burgers...I got an instant throbbing headachee and the beck of my head hurtt.....I realized..that I stopped eating burgerking burgers because I kept gettin sick feeling..I switched to chicken sandwhiches..the last few times I've got burgers..I've gotten bad headaches...and eating during a migrainnn is a terrible idea...idk y..but its like it makes the headache work..the only thing tht made me feel better during a migrain was puking...its like the pressure buildup & release eased the pain...and I think havin bad stuff sittin n ur stomache doesn't help...I ate whn I had a migrain..and felt worsee..
ReplyDeleteI noticed after eating burgers that mom made..I got a throbbing headachee...I remembered how I would get sick after eating burgerking burgers..that's why I switched to chicken sandwhiches....and I do get migrains...usually stress related..and eating during a migrain makes mine worse..I tend to feel better after vomiting..actually...there's a pressure build up & release..tht relieves the headache a bit...it also tgets stuff off ur stomache tht may hav triggered th migrain to begin with...all I know is I can't eat after gettin a migrainn..it makes me feel worse....rest & a dark room helps... no more beef for me
ReplyDeleteAfter 10 beef free years (avoided cause tryamines gaveme myoclonus and a weird upper right quadrant abdominal pain), i ate a beef marrow from a bone. Next morning i had a visual aura which lasted one hour followed by a mild migraine. Thinking it was coincidence 3.5 hours ago i had another marrow bone. Now i am getting a fairly strong migraine. Normally i only getigraines every few years. Am very sensotive to tryramines.
ReplyDeleteI can't believe that this is the only place on the internet that discusses this issue. (Probably the work of the beef industry).
ReplyDeleteI used to get several migraines a week for nearly 30 years. No medicine worked on me. 4 years ago, I stopped eating beef to try to lower my cholesterol. My cholesterol didn't change, but my headaches declined by 85% almost immediately. Like others, I tried reintroducing beef slowly in spaghetti sauce, etc., and severe headaches resumed immediately.
In the 4 years since I discovered the meat trigger, I have also found that eliminating chocolate also eliminates another 5-10% of the headaches that remained.
Thank you for having the courage to address this issue.
Yup. I just googled "can meat lead to headache?"
ReplyDeleteI recently started a low calorie diet which has beef steak on the list 5 days out of the week. Before this diet I would probably eat beef once a week. I have definitely noticed headaches. In my forehead behind my eyes. Definitely going to reduce my beef eating - especially for lunch during the work week. I just can't focus on work with this headache.! Thanks.
for many years I have been suffering from headache mostly after lunch or dinner. I thought may be some sort of cooking oil is the reason but I realized four months back that this happen only if I consume Beaf.. to make sure I tried it again....and I find beaf surly beaf create Migraine Headache. From this blog once again confirmed. Thank You.
ReplyDeleteHI CUT OUT BEEF A MONTH AGO.just to feel more healthy.THEN I NOTICED I HADNT HAD A HEADACHE IN AWHILE,THE REAL TEST WAS NO "MONTHLY" HEADACE. I LOVE BEEF BUT I'M OK WITH OUT IT HEADACHE FREE
ReplyDeleteI cured myself of beef caused migraines after 30 years by daily supplementation of Molybdenum, a very inexpensive mineral that helps the body create enzymes that break down beef.
ReplyDeleteI moved from CT to TX, too :-)
ReplyDeleteJust googled "can hamburger really cause migraines" and got here.
Nothing else has changed in my life the last week except I ate a burger at sonic a couple hours ago, and my head is killing me now.
Couple weeks ago, same thing happened after eating ground beef and pasta, which we hardly ever have.
I just ate beef and my migraine is coming on. Didn't know that beef triggered migraines.
ReplyDeleteThanks for posting.
Migraine right now. burgers and other cuts dont get me but i woke up with a great migraine this morning then i remembered i fell off the wagon and had steak lastnight. like clockwork it is. chocolate as well
ReplyDeleteI have had migraine headaches since childhood. I quit eating beef around 18, it helped. But I have a lot of other triggers. Heat, chocolate, etc. I am almost 40 still to this day have never ate beef! My family rarley eats it either. When you have chronic daily headaches you will try anything. Imitrex also does not work for me:( maby someday there will be a cure!
ReplyDeletegelatin is full of certain amino acids (and gelatin is a beef product) - the same or similar to beef. so when eating beef (especially cooked with the bone, or any connective tissue)you are consuming the same amino acids. likewise soy sauce is full of amino acids. i am not sure exactly how these make a migraine, but i think it creates an imbalance in the aminos that in turn triggers the migraine. i have had nasty migraines from plain, organic gelatin - so i know it was not a food coloring or aspartame issue.
ReplyDeleteI found this article when I asked google if beef was causing migraines so I now see that it probably is. I was told to keep a migraine diary to see what triggers these migraines and beef and my mother are some common denominators. My mother's bad attitude sends me through a loop and the stress causes me migraines. I also need to steer clear of loud noises.
ReplyDeleteI wish people provided more information with their posts other than that this happens to them. I'm about to be 30 & had a horrendous headache after having steak Friday evening. Cooked burgers & the like cause no issue for me however. It's a shame your nutritionist friend didn't actually describe the issue to you in detail.
ReplyDeleteHello. I'd like to add that menstrating women need iron more than men since we loose so much every month. My migraines go away with beef, presumably because my body needed the iron.
ReplyDeleteAlso, it really depends on the type of beef you eat. In USA, the standard way to raise cows is unsanitary as they are penned up and given hormones and antibiotics. Organic free range cows are more nutrient dense than chicken, and the only way to ensure you aren't consuming antibiotics and hormones as with regular beef.
There's a lot of factors to consider, and if you give up beef I strongly encourage you to make sure you are getting the iron you need. Everyone is different and women need the iron, maybe you were consuming too much iron? One must look at diet and exercise as a whole not just individual factors.
I don't know what it is... but ground beef, cheese, milk, yogurt... everything that comes from a cow... increases my risk of getting a margarine. Its not an exact cause and effect... sometimes I can eat a lot of beef and dairy and nothing happens... sometimes I can eat no beef and still get a headache.... but I am starting to make a connection between my exposure to cows and my head aches.. i wonder why? anyone have insight?
ReplyDeleteYes, the chemicals involved are doing this, we wouldn’t have these reactions if we raised our own beef
DeleteRead about "Tyramine". It is produced in food that is aged or such as meat, cheese, etc. Also in vegetables that are over ripe. I have migraines and msg causes most of them. Pink slime in ground beef causes migraines. The meat tenderizers in meat is another culprit. Recently I ate a large amt of watermelon and got a whopper of a migraine. Tyramine is the culprit. Tomatoes also because I love homegrown tomatoes. But can only eat a small amt or, guess what, migraine. Hope this helps you. I have had to do a lot of research to find all of this info. Drs do not give up all this information. It also causes blood pressure to go up. Good luck!
ReplyDeleteI know this article is old but just in case anyone comes across this site.
ReplyDeleteI have suffered from migraines for years and still do but I've learned a great deal over time from doing lots of reading and research.
Yes red meat does give me migraines along with many other foods like, chocolate, most cheeses, alcohol, most types of sandwich meat only Boars head brand is good because it does not have nitrates in it, dried fruit, citrus fruit, caffeine, cinnamon and nuts that’s all I can think of right now.
The reason that sometimes you can eat something and it does NOT give you a headache is because everyone has a tolerance threshold to these triggers, so once you eat something that pushes you over the threshold... that's when the migraine get triggered. Hope this helps some of you out there.
I eat grass fed beef right off the farm and suffer a terrible headache when I do. Left eye, mouth tastes like...not describe-able (it might actually be the worst part of it is that taste)it feels like an icepick has been driven right down the left side of my head. Never had one before I started eating a gluten free diet high in beef. I'm trying to ween myself off of the meat now but I tested it well and no meat no headache, I go back and eat it and get another one. It won't go away until it happens either, I'll get the feeling and then I'll go ride my dirtbike and I can get it to go away pretty much but it still lingers until it can finish. Sucks bad because I love meat.
ReplyDeleteI too am a suffer. I have tried 13 prescription medicines, a strict diet from my neurologist, countless home remedies and visiting a chiropractor regularly....all to no avail. I am currently receiving Botox injections every 12 weeks. I have been doing this for a year and a half now. I still get the everyday...literally EVERY DAY...headaches, but not the "I'm just gonna stay in the fetal position all day" migraine. I have been noticing here recently that red meat seems to trigger the more severe headache. I told my husband I thought it was beef. He kind if laughed at me, then asked if I had asked my doctor about the possibility, which I haven't as of yet, but thought I would google if anyone else suffers as well.......I guess there are many of us out there!
ReplyDeleteI have the same allergy but I have never gotten a migraine after eating ORGANIC beef. Only eat it once every other month or so but it's fine for me. Also, beef in other countries has always been fine for me as well.
ReplyDeleteI actually thought I was just plain crazy. Every time I eat at Texas Roadhouse, I get a severe migraine the next day....I thought it was just my imagination. Good to know, it is the beef...I don't get it when I eat any other beef at home or for that matter, any place else...just the steak at Texas Roadhouse.
ReplyDeleteThank you for posting this. I had a little beef last night and got a nasty toxic migraine and finally googled beef and migraines. You're confirming what will save me a lot of pain in the future.
ReplyDeleteThank you for this post. Most of my headaches are caused by MSG or cooking in a croak pot with tomato sauce which creates Tyramine. Also aged cheeses, chocolates etc. Recently I bought a steak and had a headache and have just realized that in the past this has happened as well and didn't know beef could cause headaches. I found out about a book called "Battling the "MSG MYTH" A survival Guide and Cookbook by Debby Anglesey which helped me tremendously. www.msgmyth.com
ReplyDeleteThis blog helped me realize that BEEF also is a trigger for me. Haven't tried "Organic" beef yet but will have to try now. Just started a low carb diet and one thing they tell you to eat is more meat. Not sure I can continue?
Thanks again!
Beef, like most meat, contains tyramine, a known migraine trigger. I have had to cut ALL meat out of my diet to avoid a migraine, but it works. Beef is the biggest trigger for the headaches, even organic beef. It's a hard adjustment for some people, but I decided being a vegetarian is better than suffering with migraines.
ReplyDeleteHi guys,
ReplyDeleteOld post, but i will leave my two cents anyways. It all boils down to histamine which is the major trigger for migraine s. I am sure everyone can do his research, but basically histamine forms in foods as time goes, so the fresher the meat the less histamine its got. There are other factors too, like the type of meat, also some fruits and veggies are histamine liberators..etc. Anyway a good aged steak gives you a shitload of histamine triggering your migraine.
I see people here making comments about beef being the cause of migraines. I have some news: its not the beef - its more likely because its conventional (grain fed) beef and also that its hamburger (which is all parts of the animal). Try eating whole muscle meat (steaks) and organic grass-fed. Yea, its a little more expensive, but CAFO cows are extremely unhealthy. I am 'zero carb/animal only diet' and literally the only thing I eat is red meat (beef, bison, lamb etc) and if I eat conventional meat, I get a headache too. If I eat grass-fed, organic - no headache. I wanted to share this, because I think its important to understand. What we eat and what animals eat needs to be healthy and natural.
ReplyDeleteIf you read the comments, you'll see that conversation happened.
DeleteCurious if anyone knows of any other triggers for ocular migraines? I have cut beef and pork out of my diet for a year now and my episodes have decreased to once a year rather than once a week.
ReplyDeleteFound my triggers after having daily migraines for 13 years and turning vegetarian for other reasons I found out meat and eggs were my daily cause of pain. I ate eggs daily! Couple weeks after stopping meat and eggs migraines were gone.
DeleteNo dr ever mentioned they could be a trigger. I’ve since learned peas and kidney beans are also triggers for me. Looking back had migraines as a kid which was eating meat and eggs. And then No migraines when I was vegetarian once before, wish I had put those facts together sooner but never thought of it until the migraines stopped after going vegetarian again.
Just wanted to thank you all for your posts. I've experienced a relationship between eating ground beef and headaches too. I enjoyed all your posts. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteI get headaches, very shortly, like an hour after eating ground beef mainly.. but it may not be the beef it may be Histamines, many people are sensitive to histamines in foods,, the longer a meat has been on the supermarket shelves the higher in histamines it is.. Ground Beef is meant to be highest in histamines.. if you got take down a cow, cut it open, rip out a steak and eat it straight away it may not give you problems ;). just saying .
ReplyDeleteThe one thing no one has mentioned, and like others, I have done research on this, is the fact that beef is very high in iron! If I ingest too much iron of any kind, the killer headaches nail me. Experiment with this in your diet and I think you will find its the real culprit! Thanks.
ReplyDeleteHi Guys,
ReplyDeleteGlad to find this thread! I stopped eating Pork years ago and noticed when I eat it I get a terrible throbbing migraine in my left temple and behind the eyes. No medicine works, I just have to ride it out- I usually make myself throw up and it sometimes lightens the throbbing sensation. Now back in May I was diagnosed with fibroids and I did a lot of online searching and one of the suggestions was to cut beef out or only eat farm raised beef. So I cut beef back out of my diet (I had done it a few years back). This past Saturday I decided to have a beef burger and the migraine came on just like the pork ones~ IT is Monday and I still feel a lingering threat of a headache. I googled and it brought me here! I've never had a migraine after eating beef but I was trying to remember the last time I ate beef and It was for Thanksgiving I had "oxtails". The only thing that I've found to help me out when I have these throbbing migraines is eating some raw onion~ (very disgusting but it does help but not take it completely away)~ Food is killing us :-(
Wow! At leasti knoe i am not the only one who get headaches by eating meat. It is real!
ReplyDeleteI'm suspicious that red meat is triggering mine as well. That is what brought me here.
ReplyDeleteI have been suffering with Cluster Headache for over 30 years and have done extensive dietary logs, behavior pattern logs, and used myself as guinea pig many times. One of the biggest triggers for many people (including myself) is not only red meat but any type of meat containing added hormones and/or those meats processed with nitrates ala most lunch meats and bacon...sob :( . I had cut my cluster almost to non existence by omitting meats from my diet (with the exception of fish) for about two and a half years. I say “had” because I starting adding meat into my diet about a year ago and my clusters have returned this fall WITH A VENGEANCE. I implore anyone reading this to look at all of the information out there about the connections to nitrate processed meats, alcohol, and tobacco on cluster and migraine. You see I am also a cigar smoker and imbibe from time to time. When in cluster...all of the above are ABSOLUTE NO-NO’s. The pain comes quick and terribly. There is lots of info about there about these connections.
ReplyDeleteHello Frank thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThis is a few years old, so I hope everything is fine with you, migraine free.
I can tell you how it is for me. I have migraines since I can remember being a person. But my life is not, let’s say normal, and I have no routines, which makes it harder to pinpoint triggers, but I’m 40 so I had time to identify a few. One for me is soy. Until a few years, vegetarian food around here was all based-on soy products, so no vegetarian food for me. Also, for almost 4 years I could not eat chocolate. That’s over now, thank god! Another one, cloudy days, you know those too bright, I don’t even need to go outside to know what the weather is like. Someone told me the explanation might be in the variation of atmospheric pressure and type of ions. Well this trigger is unavoidable; I could always consider moving to a sunnier region.
Lack of water and sleep hours are also fatal. Of course, migraines give me insomnias, so that’s a never-ending problem. I have tested specific foods before. Someone suggested milk and some types of cereals. I don’t drink much milk, but I do eat a lot of yogurt and cheese, I tried for 3 months not eating that and nothing change, so not that. And cereals, I heat mostly wheat, and is not that either. Someone suggested drinking a glass of red wine, supposedly, would help, I did it for 4 month nothing, I’m not a fan of alcoholic drinks anyway.
But the last 4 years I’ve been having migraines every week, affecting 2or3 days in the week, and then, as you say, the migraine medicine just leave you out of it, that the few days after the crises I feel like run over by something heavy. You can see not much left of the week to really feel normal and productive. I’m in the last part of a PhD and with the pandemic I’m basically at home all day writing. That ruins the appetite for me, so the other day when I made myself a burger, I realize that I haven’t eating one for more than a month. And guess what? Basically, migraine free for the same amount of time.
That got me wondering and I found your blog.
I thought it was the stress of the PhD, but come on, when I am 2-month to deadline of a 4 year work I don’t feel more relaxed. Did I cross some stress threshold, or could it be the meat? Maybe I’ve been eating more red meat the last 4 years without realizing it. If it is meat than it is cow. Because I avoid pork, not a fan, but I love bacon, and poultry I eat all the time, roasted on a spit that I buy a few doors over, delicious, and quick.
I’ll be testing the theory. Tomorrow another burger, with pills nearby.
(I made 4 and freeze 3, so is a waste throwing it away, at the same time now it can be used for testing).
All the best
CP
Wow! So glad you wrote this article. I have not been buying beef (afraid of meat glue, etc.) and have been eating mostly chicken, turkey, fish and have eliminated pork. Then I got hit with such a craving for beef, so I crock-potted a roast. It was delectable to say the least and really hit the spot. However, each time I ate it I felt terrific pressure in my head. I don't use salt and have great blood pressure readings, but this felt like descriptions I have heard from people with HTN. It's so strange that I finally Google'd "every time I eat roast beef I feel pressure in my head" and found you.
ReplyDeleteAmazing! But, here's my question: When talking with the Texan med. student, he mentioned "it's complicated". What did he mean? Did he ever explain?
Thank you for this article!!
This thread seems to be the only thing on the internet that discusses this problem. For me, it's beef and pork that give me migraines but it doesn't trigger right away. It takes about 24 hours before my headaches start and they last for about a day and a half. Back in December I went to an allergist for some really bad sinus allergies and along with the environmental allergies, beef and pork popped up on the test. I thought it was strange because I never recalled having issues but I went ahead and eliminated it from my diet to see if there were any changes. I finally figured out that it was causing the headaches. Before that, I pretty much had suffered from headaches and migraines my whole life but just took it as a normal part of life. My biggest problem is with eating out because of the cross contamination. I really can't eat anything that is grilled when eating out because typically everything is cooked on the same flat top. Even if i ask for it to be cooked separately, I'm usually taking a gamble. You think beef and pork would be easy to avoid, but I'm still learning.
ReplyDeleteIt took me years to realize that animal products were causing my severe migraines (dairy, eggs, meat) Seafood doesn't cause headaches at all. As soon as I started eating vegan along with seafood once a week, everything cleared up.
ReplyDeleteHi, I want to add my experience as well to say it has been a few years now that I realised how zi get headache after every good burger �� meal I eat. Not all meat, but only burgers which then made me question Beef. This is the first time I Google it and glad I found your comments. Your experience makes a lot more sense to me than other websites. It is not about processed food in my case, but only beef, at least so far!
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In my experience depending where the meat is purchased.I've found that I get bad headaches from certain stores or restaurants. I think getting a bad headache depends on the amount of preservatives used in processing the meat.I've found if I eat Stop and Shop/Giant ground beef or Wendy's I get terrible migraines.I know Wendy's does not freeze the meat.
ReplyDeleteI totally agree. Mine only come from low grade beef. Fast food teriyaki, McDonald's, and Gryo places have all done it to me. But the grocery store and Panera Bread beef never have one time for example. And I eat beef religiously from panera
DeleteThis is something I finally found out I deal with as well. It only seems to happen after specifically low grade beef. Like if I get a beef teriyaki, or a fast food gyro, or a McDonald's burger. 90% of my migraines included fast food beef in the same day. I have never gotten one from more quality beef at the grocery store.
ReplyDeleteGlad I found this post. I am determined that ground beef is what brings on my migraines. I had grind beef last night because I was craving a burger. Made it at home myself, no salt added, organic-grass fed beef from Costco. It was delicious and satisfied my craving. I was awakened this morning by a powerful pressure and pain behind my left eye. It’s a no brained for me. I really love beef, but that was the last straw.
ReplyDeleteChronic, debilitating migraine suffer, 15+ migraine days per montb. Currently working on changing my diet to eliminate any & all trigger foods. All forms of red meat (beef & lamb) along with dairy from cows.
ReplyDeleteI have chronic inflammation throughout my body and for treatment i have cut out all dairy and beef products from my diet cause it triggers really bad back pain. Cause I have scoliosis. But someone gave me all this beef that he couldn't eat and I hate wasting food so've been eating beef for 4 days straight now, one meal per day, and noticed a really bad headache (on top of the backpain). Since I know that I'm very sensitive to beef I searched the net for beef headache and found this. Thank you for the confirmation that it's not in my head.
ReplyDeleteUnderstanding the connection between physical health and mental well-being, like how certain foods can impact migraines, is essential. Similarly, managing social anxiety requires tailored approaches that address individual needs. In Cincinnati, comprehensive social anxiety therapist cincinnati solutions focus on empathy and support, providing effective therapies to help individuals thrive socially. The benefits of seeking a skilled therapist include improved self-esteem, better social interactions, and overall mental health.
ReplyDeleteYes,for me I’d been suffering migraine headaches for 15 years until I figured out what’s really triggering it.Main cause for me is eating a beef stew,and secondary is any oily soup from chicken,pork and beef.
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