Insight: Small Habits That Prevent Migraine Attacks

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Can small habits prevent migraines? Discover how tiny daily changes build resilience and help your brain stay below its trigger threshold.

Migraine Heroes Episode 148 explores how small, consistent habits can rewire your brain—reducing triggers and building resilience against migraines.

Episode Description

What if preventing migraines didn’t require drastic changes—but small ones repeated consistently?

In this episode of Migraine Heroes Podcast, host Diane Ducarme explores how the concept of atomic habits can transform migraine prevention. While many people search for a single trigger, migraine brains often react to the accumulation of tiny daily stresses: poor sleep, dehydration, skipped meals, emotional strain, or screen overload—until the brain crosses its migraine threshold.

Inspired by the philosophy of small, consistent actions popularized in behavioral science, Diane explains how tiny daily habits can gradually strengthen your nervous system and help stabilize the sensitive migraine brain. By blending neuroscience, lifestyle medicine, and practical experience from working with migraine sufferers, this episode reveals why consistency beats intensity when it comes to protecting your brain.

You’ll learn:
💡 Why migraines are rarely caused by a single trigger and how small daily stresses quietly stack together
💡 How “atomic habits” can build nervous system resilience and lower your migraine threshold over time
💡 Simple daily habits you can start today to protect your brain and reduce the likelihood of migraine attacks

Instead of chasing the perfect solution, this episode invites you to focus on small choices repeated every day, because when it comes to migraine prevention, the smallest habits can create the biggest change.

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References: 

  • Pathophysiology of Migraine (Goadsby et al., 2017): This comprehensive review describes migraine as a disorder of brain network dysfunction involving trigeminal activation, CGRP signaling, and altered sensory processing rather than a simple vascular disorder. Read more here.
  • Migraine: Multiple Processes, Complex Pathophysiology (Burstein, Noseda & Borsook, 2015): This review explains that migraine involves multiple interacting brain systems, including trigeminovascular signaling, sensory processing networks, and central sensitization, helping explain the broad range of migraine symptoms and trigger sensitivity. Read more here.
  • The Triggers or Precipitants of the Acute Migraine Attack (Kelman, 2007): This large clinical analysis identifies common migraine triggers such as stress, sleep disruption, hormonal changes, weather, and certain foods, while emphasizing that trigger sensitivity varies widely between individuals. Read more here.

 

Disclaimer: This podcast is for informational purposes only and does not substitute for providing medical advice. Always consult your healthcare professional before making any health-related decisions.

For women, men, and children who suffer from migraine disease, Migraine Heroes is your go-to resource for understanding, managing, and overcoming migraine attacks.

We cover all types of migraines and related headaches, including primary and secondary migraines, chronic migraines, and cluster migraines. We dive deep into the complexities of migraine with aura and migraine without aura, as well as rarer forms like hemiplegic migraine, retinal migraine, and acephalgic migraine (silent migraine). Our discussions also extend to cervicogenic headaches, ice pick headaches, and pressure headaches, which often mimic migraine or contribute to overall migraine burden.

Originally published April 8, 2026

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