My Daily Persistent Headache
By Warren Cereghino, Guest Columnist
Waking up from my pre-work noontime nap one October day in 2007, I had a headache. I still have it.
Thinking little of it at the time, I took two acetaminophen capsules (maybe Tylenol; maybe the generic from CVS or Costco) and headed off to work.
I toiled nightly in a Los Angeles television station’s news department, where I was a news editor contributing to the nightly 10pm newscast. I liked the work and didn’t mind the night schedule because it kept me out of mischief and off the streets.
That first night, the headache persisted. And it just never stopped. Over the next few weeks, I was gobbling pain relievers of one form or another every four hours, all the while trying to find the cause and a cure with all sorts of practitioners.
A little research taught me that this was known as “New Daily Persistent Headache.” It sure as hell was persistent.
My journey took me to the offices of two different chiropractors who had successfully treated the persistent headaches of two referring friends (one was my daughter-in-law, who is a RN). Both doctors tried, and both were unable to make it go away.
Next, I tried acupuncture. That didn’t work, either.
Meanwhile, I kept gobbling acetaminophen and ibuprofen like they were candy. Determined to find the cause, I turned to neurologists. Two doctors who were with separate practices in Santa Monica evaluated me, had me undergo a scan and tried to figure it out, but to no avail.
By year’s end, I was still struggling with the debilitating effects of the headache and despairing of ever finding the elusive cause and cure. I had to face the fact that the only avenue open to me appeared to be pain management.
In January 2008, I went to see David Kudrow, MD, whose neurology practice in Santa Monica specializes in pain management. He treats patients and conducts research. Dr. Kudrow gave me a thorough interview and then prescribed a nightly dose of 10mg of Elavil, an anti-depressant.
I cannot remember what he predicted in regard to when it would take effect, but a few weeks later I encountered a young man who’d grown up across the street from me and was now a practicing pediatric neurosurgeon. He said he agreed with the prescription and told me it would take about a month to take effect. He was right.
Over the years, the dosage of Elavil (or its generic amitriptyline) has had to be increased, first from 10mg nightly and then to 20mg. A couple of years ago Dr. Kudrow bumped it up again to 30mg nightly.
Recently he suggested I try to scale back to 20mg nightly. I tried, but it didn’t work. The 20mg dosage didn’t offer enough pharmacological firepower and I went back to 30mg after about ten days.
Dr. Kudrow saved my life. I have other health issues, but without his help in pain management I wouldn’t even be able to address the other issues of hypertension, diabetes and pre-clinical heart disease. I’m two months shy of turning 82 as of this writing. Without Elavil, I would be dead.
Warren Cereghino is a retired TV news producer, writer and editor who spent 55 years at TV stations in Phoenix, Sacramento, San Francisco-Oakland and Los Angeles. Warren is a graduate of Arizona State and a military veteran who served during the Berlin Crisis of 1961.
The information in this column should not be considered as professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. It is for informational purposes only and represents the author’s opinions alone. It does not inherently express or reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of Pain News Network.