Episode Details

Back to Episodes
5 Ways Migraine Anxiety Triggers Your Next Attack Without You Realizing It

5 Ways Migraine Anxiety Triggers Your Next Attack Without You Realizing It

Published 1 month, 3 weeks ago
Description

That constant low-level worry, “Will this trigger a migraine?”, might feel protective. But what if it’s quietly doing the opposite?

In this episode of Migraine Heroes Podcast, host Diane Ducarme explores how migraine-related anxiety subtly reshapes the brain and nervous system, often increasing the likelihood of your next attack without you realizing it.

This isn’t about fear, weakness, or “overthinking.” It’s about biology. When anxiety becomes intertwined with migraine, it can lock your system into anticipation mode, keeping pain pathways primed and hyper-reactive.

In this episode, you’ll discover:

🧠 How migraine anxiety rewires threat circuits in the brain and lowers your migraine threshold

🔍 The five everyday habits anxiety creates, from hyper-monitoring to avoidance that quietly set the stage for attacks

⚠️ Why trying to control every trigger can actually make your nervous system more sensitive, not safer

🌿 A simple, in-the-moment calming practice to interrupt the anxiety–migraine loop and restore a sense of safety

This episode blends neuroscience, lived experience, and a compassionate nervous-system lens to help you see migraine anxiety differently, not as an enemy to fight, but as a signal your system is asking for reassurance.

If you’ve ever felt trapped between fear of pain and the pain itself, this conversation offers a gentler, more effective way forward.

🎧 New episodes every Monday and Wednesday

🔗 Discover our work on migraineheroes.com

References:

  1. Migraine-Related Disability, Anxiety, and Depression (Buse et al., 2017): This population-based study shows that higher migraine disability is strongly associated with anxiety and depression, highlighting how emotional health and migraine severity are deeply interconnected rather than separate issues. Read more here.
  2. The Bidirectional Relationship Between Insomnia and Migraine (Duan et al., 2022): This review explains how poor sleep and migraine reinforce each other through shared pathways involving hyperarousal, altered pain processing, and nervous system dysregulation, making sleep both a trigger and a consequence of migraine attacks. Read more here.
  3. Altered Brain Activity Linking Pain and Negative Emotion (Zhang et al., 2025): This neuroimaging study shows that changes in low-frequency brain activity within pain- and emotion-processing regions are closely associated with pain severity and negative emotional states, highlighting how chronic trigeminal pain is shaped by overlapping neural circuits for pain and mood regulation. Read more here.
  4. The Foundations of Chinese Medicine (Maciocia, 2005): This foundational text outlines how internal imbalances in systems such as the Liver, Spleen, and Kidney influence pain, emotion, and neurological symptoms, offering a traditional framework for understanding migraine patterns beyond isolated triggers. Read more her
Listen Now