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5 Hidden Food Compounds Linked to Migraines & How To Spot Them on Labels
Description
You’re eating “healthy.” You’re reading ingredients. And yet… the migraines keep coming.
What if the trigger isn’t obvious but hiding in plain sight under different names on the label?
In this episode of Migraine Heroes Podcast, host Diane Ducarme uncovers five common but often disguised food compounds that can quietly activate a sensitive migraine brain. These ingredients aren’t always listed in ways you’d expect and for some people, they can significantly lower the migraine threshold.
Blending neuroscience with practical food awareness, this episode helps you move from confusion to clarity without fear or food obsession.
You’ll discover:
💡 The five hidden compounds most commonly linked to migraine — and the alternative names brands use to disguise them
💡 Why the migraine brain reacts differently to certain additives and naturally occurring compounds
💡 How to tell whether you are personally sensitive instead of assuming every trigger applies to you
You’ll also learn a simple, empowering strategy to scan any food label in under 30 seconds so you can shop calmly, confidently, and without second-guessing every choice.
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References:
- Aspartame as a Dietary Trigger of Headache (Lipton, Newman et al., 1989): Investigates whether aspartame is reported as a trigger in a headache-clinic population; useful as an early clinical reference in the “sweeteners + headache” discussion. Read more here
- Diet and Headache: Part 1 (Martin & Vij, 2016): Reviews dietary factors and suspected food triggers (including amines like histamine/tyramine) and emphasizes variability in individual sensitivity. Read more here.
- Histamine-free diet for histamine-induced intolerance and chronic headaches (Wantke, Götz & Jarisch, 1993): Reports improvement in chronic headache in patients with suspected histamine-related intolerance after a histamine-restricted diet, supporting the “subset responder” idea. Read more here.
- Headache and Mechanical Sensitization After Monosodium Glutamate Intake (Baad-Hansen et al., 2013): In a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover design, repeated MSG exposure was associated with headache complaints and increased mechanical sensitivity in pericranial/masticatory muscles, supporting MSG as a possible trigger for a susceptible subgroup. Read more here.
- The Role of Nitric Oxide in Migraine and Other Primary Headaches (Olesen et al., 2008): Reviews evidence that nitric-oxide signaling is a key pathway in migraine biology and that nitric-oxide donors can provoke migraine attacks in research settings, making NO a central experimental model. Read more here.
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