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Trendy Powdered Drink… But Is It Helping or Hurting Your Migraines?

Trendy Powdered Drink… But Is It Helping or Hurting Your Migraines?

Published 2 weeks ago
Description

A popular powdered drink praised for “calm energy” and mental focus is everywhere right now. But for people with migraine-prone brains, the question isn’t just whether it’s healthy — it’s whether it’s stabilizing your nervous system… or quietly pushing it toward a migraine threshold.

In this episode of Migraine Heroes Podcast, host Diane Ducarme explores the surprising relationship between this trendy drink and migraine biology. While some people feel calmer and more focused after drinking it, others experience headaches, overstimulation, or delayed migraine attacks.

By combining modern neuroscience with holistic perspectives, this episode helps you understand why the exact same drink can act as support for one brain and a trigger for another.

You’ll discover:

💡 Why a famous powdered drink praised for “calm energy” may either stabilize or overstimulate a migraine brain

💡 How certain compounds inside it influence brain excitability, blood vessels, and inflammation linked to migraines

💡 How to recognize whether your body experiences it as support… or as a pernicious trigger

If you’ve ever wondered whether a trendy wellness drink might be helping your migraines or quietly making them worse, this episode will help you listen more closely to your body’s signals.

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References:

  • L-Theanine Reduces Psychological and Physiological Stress Responses (Kimura et al., 2007): This placebo-controlled study found that L-theanine, a compound in green tea, reduced both subjective stress and physiological stress responses during a mental stress task, supporting its calming effect on the nervous system. Read more here.
  • Green Tea Effects on Cognition, Mood and Human Brain Function (Mancini et al., 2017): This systematic review found that green tea and its components may support attention, working memory, mood, and stress regulation, suggesting benefits that go beyond simple caffeine stimulation. Read more here.
  • Caffeine in the Management of Patients with Headache (Lipton et al., 2017): This clinical review explains that caffeine can help some people by enhancing acute headache treatment, but can also worsen headache patterns through withdrawal, overuse, or inconsistent intake. Read more here.
  • Caffeinated Beverage Intake as a Potential Trigger of Migraine (Mostofsky et al., 2019): This prospective diary-based study found that higher-than-usual caffeine intake, especially three or more servings in a day, may increase short-term migraine risk in some people with episodic migraine. 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

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