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Stress Eating versus Calm: The Hidden Trigger Behind Your Migraines

Stress Eating versus Calm: The Hidden Trigger Behind Your Migraines

Published 1 month, 2 weeks ago
Description

Is it really what you eat… or how your body feels when you eat it that shapes your migraines?

In this episode of Migraine Heroes Podcast, host Diane Ducarme uncovers a hidden trigger many overlook: the state of your nervous system when you eat. Because when stress takes over, your body doesn’t just think differently, it digests, absorbs, and reacts differently too.

You’ll discover:

💡 How stress can quietly shift your appetite, food choices, and lower your migraine threshold without you realizing it

💡 Why irregular or emotional eating creates internal chaos that your migraine brain struggles to tolerate

💡 A simple at-home practice to help your body move from tension to calm before a migraine fully builds

This episode invites you to look beyond food itself and start listening to the state your body is in when you nourish it.

Because sometimes, the trigger isn’t on your plate… it’s at your pace.

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🔗 Discover our work on migraineheroes.com

References:

  • Global Burden of Headache Disorders (Stovner et al., 2025): This paper provides updated global estimates of headache disorders, highlighting their widespread impact on disability and public health worldwide. Read more here.
  • Global Epidemiology of Migraine (Steiner et al., 2023): This review explores the global prevalence of migraine and its implications for public health, emphasizing the need for improved recognition and policy response. Read more here.
  • Lifestyle Factors and Migraine (Seng, Martin & Houle, 2022): This paper examines how lifestyle factors such as stress, sleep, diet, and physical activity influence migraine occurrence and severity. Read more here.
  • Stress and Migraine (Buse et al., 2022): This review evaluates the relationship between stress and migraine, discussing how stress can both trigger and result from migraine attacks. Read more here.
  • Nighttime Snacking, Stress, and Migraine Activity (Martin et al., 2014): This study investigates how eating patterns and stress interact to influence migraine activity, highlighting the role of behavioral triggers. Read more here.
  • Migraine and Brain Glucose Metabolism (Gross et al., 2019): This paper explores the “neuroenergetic” hypothesis of migraine, suggesting that altered brain energy metabolism may contribute to migraine susceptibility. Read more here.
  • The Metabolic Face of Migraine (van den Maagdenberg et al., 2019): This review discusses metabolic mechanisms underlying migraine and how they may inform new treatment approaches. Read more here.
  • Irregular Meals and Migraine (Topal et al., 2025): This scoping review examines how irre
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