Insight: The Fasting Paradox — Skipping Meals & Migraine

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Can skipping meals trigger migraines? Learn when fasting supports your brain and when it stresses your system instead.

Episode 117 explores the relationship between fasting, meal timing, and migraine patterns, illustrated with a clock, fork, and spoon.

Episode Description

You skip breakfast, push through lunch, and tell yourself you’ll eat later,  but instead, your head starts pounding. What if fasting isn’t helping your focus, but quietly stressing your brain into a migraine attack?

In this episode of Migraine Heroes Podcast, host Diane Ducarme explores the paradox of fasting — why it can be both a healing tool and a hidden stressor for migraine-prone brains. With insights from neuroscience and Eastern medicine, you’ll learn how to find your balance between cleansing and collapse.

You’ll discover:

🍽️ Why fasting can support or sabotage brain health depending on your stress levels, hormones, and energy reserves

🧠 How blood sugar, cortisol, and neurotransmitters interact when you go too long without eating

🌿 What Traditional Chinese Medicine reveals about the dangers of “empty fire” and energy depletion

✨ How to fast in a way that calms, not shocks, your nervous system

This episode helps you reclaim a mindful relationship with food — one that nourishes your brain instead of draining it. Because sometimes, the bravest thing your body asks for isn’t restraint… it’s rhythm.

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References:

  • Breakfast Skipping and Declines in Cognitive Score Among Community-Dwelling Older Adults: A 2023 longitudinal study of the HEIJO-KYO Cohort found that older adults who skipped breakfast one or more times per week had more than double the risk of cognitive decline (IRR ≈ 2.1) compared to those who ate breakfast daily. Read the full study here.
  • Associations Between Breakfast Skipping and Outcomes in Neuropsychiatric Disorders, Cognitive Performance, and Frailty: A Mendelian Randomization Study: A 2024 MR analysis published in BMC Psychiatry found causal links between breakfast skipping and increased risk of ADHD, major depression, poorer cognitive performance (β ≈ -0.16), and higher frailty scores. Read more here. 
  • Fasting as a Therapy in Neurological Disease: This review (PMC) explores how fasting or caloric restriction may influence neurological disorders, including migraine, via metabolic and neuroprotective pathways. Read the full review here.
  • The Impact of Continuous Calorie Restriction and Fasting on Cognition in Adults Without Eating Disorders: A review published in Nutrition Reviews examines how sustained calorie restriction or intermittent fasting affects cognition, mood, and brain function—even in healthy adults—and suggests implications for migraine via neuro-energetic regulation. Read more here.
  • Migraine, Brain Glucose Metabolism and the “Neuroenergetic” Hypothesis: A Scoping Review: A 2022 scoping review in The Journal of Pain assessed evidence that migraine might stem from impaired brain glucose metabolism (insulin resistance in neurons/astrocytes) leading to energy mismatch and potential chronification. Read the review here. 
  • Regularly Eating Breakfast Could Shield You Against Age-Related Brain Changes, Study Finds: A 2025 summary article from Michigan State University reported on research showing that daily breakfast consumption was associated with reduced markers of brain aging, hinting at a protective effect of morning nutrition on brain health. Read the article here.
  • Intermittent Fasting and Its Effects on the Brain: A resource from the University of Wisconsin ADRC outlines how intermittent fasting may influence brain health, neuroplasticity, and energy metabolism—concepts relevant to migraine since brain energy deficit may trigger attacks. 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.

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