Inderal for migraine headaches

I was just put on Inderal for treatment of migraine headaches.
Right now I’m at 80mg per day.
Does anyone have any personal experience with this drug? I’m
wondering what, if any side effects I can realistically expect
as I get up to higher dosages. If you’ve taken Inderal before
for this purpose, have you found that it helped lessen the
severity/frequency of the headaches? I’ve not noticed any
change in the headache pattern, but I’ve only been taking it
for about three days…

Thanks for any information,
Rebecca Hammaker

3 Responses to “Inderal for migraine headaches”

  1. admin says:

    In article <2lg09o$…@apple.com>, hamma…@apple.com (Rebecca Hammaker)
    wrote:

    > I was just put on Inderal for treatment of migraine headaches.
    > Right now I’m at 80mg per day.
    > Does anyone have any personal experience with this drug? I’m
    > wondering what, if any side effects I can realistically expect
    > as I get up to higher dosages. If you’ve taken Inderal before
    > for this purpose, have you found that it helped lessen the
    > severity/frequency of the headaches? I’ve not noticed any
    > change in the headache pattern, but I’ve only been taking it
    > for about three days…

    > Thanks for any information,
    > Rebecca Hammaker

    I have been on Inderal LA, 120 mg/day, for 3 years.  I started at 60 mg,
    then 120 mg, then 180 mg (I think at two week intervals).  I backed off to
    120 mg because of severe fatigue.  I noticed a reduction in the severity of
    my migraines once I went to 120 mg but it took about a month before I
    noticed a significant reduction in the frequency.  During the time I have
    been taking Inderal LA I have experienced weight gain and have been
    *diagnosed* with asthma.  (I only get asthmatic during allergy season and
    quitting smoking has really helped so I don’t really consider myself as
    having asthma except between late March and early June :-) .)  I do not know
    for a fact that the Inderal has actually *caused* either the weight gain or
    the asthma, but I do know that it is contraindicated in people with asthma
    so I go through a monthly fight with my pharmacist to obtain the drug.  (If
    I ever stop having migraines entirely I may let the pharmacist win one of
    these days.  Until then, the Inderal is *definitely* worth it for me.)
    Other than mild fatigue, which is infinitely preferable to having constant
    headaches, I have no other problems with Inderal.  

    By the way, I believe that if you show no improvement after six or eight
    weeks, that this indicates Inderal isn’t the right drug for you, and the
    doctor is supposed to take you off of it.  **DO NOT** just stop taking
    Inderal without your doctor’s awareness.  It has been a few years since I
    did my last read-up on Inderal but I understand that abrupt withdrawal can
    cause serious problems.  Perhaps someone else knows exactly what the
    problems are.  I’m not a pharmacist, just a fellow migraine sufferer with a
    little experience.

    Good luck!

    P.S.  Inderal LA is a long-acting form of propranolol and may have
    differences to Inderal that I am not aware of.

    ********************************************************************************
    Lora M. LeMosy, Box 3711, Duke University Medical Center, Durham NC 27710
    USA
                               l…@galactose.mc.duke.edu

    Disclaimer:  Opinions expressed here are my own and not those of my
    employer.  I doubt if my employer even knows I *have* opinions.
    ********************************************************************************

  2. admin says:

    A past edit (from I can’t remember who) said…

    |> noticed a significant reduction in the frequency.  During the time I have
    |> been taking Inderal LA I have experienced weight gain and have been
    |> *diagnosed* with asthma.  (I only get asthmatic during allergy season and
    |> quitting smoking has really helped so I don’t really consider myself as
    |> having asthma except between late March and early June :-) .)  I do not know
    |> for a fact that the Inderal has actually *caused* either the weight gain or
    |> the asthma, but I do know that it is contraindicated in people with asthma
    |> so I go through a monthly fight with my pharmacist to obtain the drug.  (If
    |> I ever stop having migraines entirely I may let the pharmacist win one of
    |> these days.  Until then, the Inderal is *definitely* worth it for me.)

    The reason that us pharmacists are unwilling to dish out things like Inderal to
    people with asthma is that they can precipitate asthma attacks in asthma
    sufferers. Basically, these tablets do the exact opposite of some of the inhalers
    used to relieve asthma (they are beta-blockers, whereas things like Ventolin
    [Salbutamol] are beta-stimulants) and so they can cause airways to constrict,
    bringing on an attack. Being generally nice people, we don’t like giving people
    tablets that might end up killing them. When I’m in the position of getting
    as prescription for beta-blockers for an asthmatic patient, I always make sure
    that the doctor hsan’t "forgotten" about the risks involved.  Having said that, I
    have known people with asthma who have been quite happy on really quite high
    doses of beta-blockers.

    As for the Inderal *causing* the asthma, I wouldn’t like to say, but it could
    certainly cause mild, latent symptoms to come to the fore during regular
    treatment.

    &…

    |> did my last read-up on Inderal but I understand that abrupt withdrawal can
    |> cause serious problems.  Perhaps someone else knows exactly what the
    |> problems are.  I’m not a pharmacist, just a fellow migraine sufferer with a

    All these drugs are primarily used to lower blood pressure. If they are stopped
    abruptly, blood pressure can "rebound" to dangerously high levels. As always, it
    depends on the patient, but in a patient who is elderly or who had very high
    blood pressure before starting treatment, it could be quite a problem. If you’ve
    been taking them for any length of time, see your doctor before stopping. Having
    said that (why do I always say that ?), a lot of doctors I know tend to say "Oh,
    just stop the tablets", which causes a lot of pharmacists I know to start tearing
    their hair out in frustration.


    Chris Richardson (Foop)
    JANET: C.Richard…@uk.ac.kcl.cc.bay
    Internet: f…@sg2.pcy.kcl.ac.uk (preferred, when it works)
    Ignore any lines above this one – we are having problems with our mailer

  3. admin says:

    - Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -

    l…@galactose.mc.duke.edu (Lora LeMosy) writes:
    >In article <2lg09o$…@apple.com>, hamma…@apple.com (Rebecca Hammaker)
    >wrote:

    >> I was just put on Inderal for treatment of migraine headaches.
    >> Right now I’m at 80mg per day.
    >> Does anyone have any personal experience with this drug? I’m
    >> wondering what, if any side effects I can realistically expect
    >> as I get up to higher dosages. If you’ve taken Inderal before
    >> for this purpose, have you found that it helped lessen the
    >> severity/frequency of the headaches? I’ve not noticed any
    >> change in the headache pattern, but I’ve only been taking it
    >> for about three days…

    >> Thanks for any information,
    >> Rebecca Hammaker

    [reply deleted]
    I’ve been taking Inderal/Propranolol for about 15 years now, and there
    have been side effects.  Females would not be subject to some of those
    effects, but I’m sure that they will be equally affected by others.  
    Hallucinations are one such effect.  I well remember the ghostly figure
    who would come to sit on my bedside lamp.  It was interesting, since I
    knew full well it was not there.  You also have to be very careful not to
    get very angry or tense.  Anything that will produce adrenalin is liable
    to also produce a headache that will take the top of your head clean
    off.  I am on only 40 mg/day, and I can no longer pilot an airplane for
    that reason.  

    Kenneth T. Cornelius      kenc…@clark.net

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