It was one of the worst headaches 16-year-old
Monica has suffered.
“It would fade, and then it would intensify, and the
only thing that really made me feel better was I just went
and sat in my room in the dark,” she says.
What caused her headache?
“Maybe stress, going from one thing to the next,”
Monica speculates.
Or was it caffeine? Monica admits she relies on a daily dose
of caffeine.
“I usually have a Coke a day, and if I don’t
have a Coke by six o’clock or so, I might start to get
a little bit of a headache,” she says.
Results of a five-year study of kids who drank more than
a liter of cola a day and also complained of headaches point
to caffeine as the trigger. After gradually cutting back on
soda, those caffeine-induced headaches were gone in two weeks.
“[Caffeine] definitely is a factor [in the onset of
headaches],” says Dr. Jeffrey Woodward, a medical doctor
who specializes in headache and pain management.
But Dr. Woodward says that other headache-producing factors
exist as well.
“There is a growing population among teenagers and
adults, too, that have what we call chronic daily headaches,
and these people just have headaches that just go on and on
and on,” Dr. Woodward says.
Lack of sleep, poor diet and taking painkillers too often
might be to blame. In some cases, the pain may be a sign of
something more serious. If headaches consistently interfere
with schoolwork and activities, and your child doesn’t
seem to easily recover, don’t dismiss the problem.
“I think a lot of teenagers get short-shifted with
headaches because there is a prevailing thought among the
general population that headaches are all stress related and
[kids] are all trying to get out of school and trying to get
out of their work,” Dr. Woodward says. “I think
you have to realize it is a real illness, and it has to be
treated as such.”
Still, experts say, most headaches in kids are benign, and
like Monica’s headaches, can be easily managed with
over-the-counter medications or some quiet time alone.
“It usually takes a while [for the medicine to work],
and then I’ll forget about it, and then I’ll kind
of realize, ‘Oh, it doesn’t hurt anymore,’”
Monica says.
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