HeadWise HeadWise: Volume 7, Issue 1 | Page 9

Book Excerpt “I believe your headaches are due to tension,” the doctor reported to him. But once the belief was stated, the relief did not follow. Dr. Seymour Diamond He was convinced that he had migraine. That was understandable, but I began to look elsewhere, for his headaches were not focused on one side or the other. They came daily, not occasionally. He was troubled by sleep disturbances – he customarily awakened early in the morning. All these were signs of a deep depression that was exhibiting itself in a persistent and intense headache. Actually, I felt he was getting chronic daily headaches. For though the depression was prominent, some of the headaches he suffered, on occasion, to me sounded very much as if they were migraine. So I chose the monoamine oxidase inhibitor (MAOI) – phenelzine (Nardil). I had two reasons for choosing phenelzine: It is one of those rare medications which seem to work against depression as well as against migraine; and I did not want to use the common antidepressants, amitriptyline (Elavil), for example, because I felt it might cause complications with his diabetes. It turned out that the choice was a good one. His headaches were greatly reduced right from the start. As time went by, he seemed to overcome them altogether. He saw other benefits from the medication. “I no longer lose my temper over sloppy work and my patience quota has risen sharply,” he said. But the second phase of treatment failed somewhat. I was, of course, curious professionally and personally at what might be causing the depression. For here was a man who had endured combat and politics without any headache problems or sleep disturbance. And suddenly in his thirties and forties he fell prey to both. I thought it might have to do with his married life. There were indications that he was not getting on well with his wife and some of the headache patterns – their increase during vacations and weekends – suggested an effort to maintain calm in a situation which he found difficult. But when I asked him about it, he was quite blunt. He didn’t want to talk about it. He told me he didn’t consult me as a psychiatrist. Thus, the barriers were high and formidable. When somebody tells me that, I leave him alone. We’d conquered the pain, and that was his top concern. He was aware, I’m sure, of the conflict that brought about depression. And he was learning to live with it or to live apart from it: he separated from his wife. He was not a weak man; his whole life showed that, and once he was freed from pain, he was also free to tackle, by himself, the problem behind it. In subsequent years, whenever my name appeared in relation to headache he would send me a note and a copy of the article and tell me in his note how well he was doing. He died recently of other causes than his headache but donated a very substantial amount of his fortune to the National Headache Foundation. HW www.headaches.org | National Headache Foundation 9