Blood pressure and headaches

May 20, 2008

For many years headaches were thought to be triggered by elevated blood pressure.  Evidence had suggested that only very sudden increase in blood pressure triggered a headache in some patients, but the myth of high blood pressure headaches has persisted.  Norwegian researchers published a very surprising finding in the April issue of journal Neurology. They looked at the data on 120,000 people and found that increasing systolic blood pressure was associated with a decrease in migraine and non-migraine headaches.  Even more striking was the inverse correlation with the pulse pressure (difference between systolic and diastolic pressure, for example blood pressure of 110/80 means that the pulse pressure is 30). Patients with higher pulse pressure had fewer migraine and other headaches. It can be speculated that hardening of arteries that occurs with elevated blood pressure makes them less likely to constrict and dilate, which is part of a migraine process.

Written by
Alexander Mauskop, MD
Continue reading
September 7, 2025
How Artificial Sweeteners May Be Affecting Your Brain
A large Brazilian study published in Neurology followed nearly 13,000 adults for eight years and found something troubling: people who consumed the most artificial sweeteners showed faster cognitive...
Read article
August 30, 2025
Lithium Levels are low in Alzheimer’s. Is there a role in Migraine and Chronic Pain?
Recently published research on lithium deficiency in Alzheimer’s disease has caught the attention of the media. As a neurologist specializing in pain and headache medicine with an interest in no...
Read article
August 16, 2025
The Healing Power of Holding Hands: Insights from Neuroscience on Pain Relief
There’s something powerful about human touch when you’re hurting. As a neurologist, I see every day how a gentle hand squeeze from someone you trust can shift your pain—not just emotionally, but in...
Read article