Botox helps post-traumatic headaches

August 4, 2014

Botox is FDA-approved only for chronic migraine headaches, however, it is being used “off-label” for other types of headaches as well. We find that frequent episodic migraines, cluster headaches, numular, and cervicogenic (neck-related) headaches improve with Botox. In our practice, post-traumatic headaches also seem to respond to Botox.

A report by neurologists from Stony Brook University describes five patients suffering from post-traumatic headaches, who responded to Botox. These patients sustained a traumatic brain injury and had suffered from post-traumatic headaches for years, despite trials of various prophylactic medications. After treatment with Botox, all of their five patients had greater than 50% improvement of their disability as measured by the MIDAS (MIgraine Disability Assessment Scale) questionnaire.

This is not a surprising observation because in many patients with a traumatic brain injury headaches have migraine features, suggesting similar underlying mechanisms. People with a family history of migraines who sustain a head injury seem to be more likely to develop post-traumatic headaches than those without such family history, which also suggests a link with migraines. Some patients with post-traumatic headaches and especially those with overt whiplash injury (almost all head injuries, to a varying degree, involve a whiplash neck injury) may respond to Botox because Botox relaxes tight muscles. We no longer think that this is the reason Botox helps migraines because there is evidence that in migraines Botox works by blocking sensory nerve endings rather than by relaxing muscles.

Because of the cost, insurance companies are often unwilling to pay for Botox to treat anything but chronic migraines. However, headaches that begin after a head injury and are accompanied by some migraine features can be correctly classified as post-traumatic chronic migraines, thus avoiding difficulties with the insurance companies.

Written by
Alexander Mauskop, MD
Continue reading
November 15, 2025
Cluster headaches
Cluster headaches and solar activity
It was an unusual week at the New York Headache Center. After months of relative calm, my schedule suddenly filled with cluster headache patients—one even consulting me virtually from Saudi Arabia. The influx came right after a G5-level geomagnetic storm, one of the strongest solar events in recent memory.
Read article
November 10, 2025
Alternative Therapies
A Week of Meditation Changes Brains and Bodies
A week-long meditation retreat produces dramatic changes in brain and metabolic functions
Read article
October 21, 2025
Alternative Therapies
Meditation is better than slow breathing exercise in reducing pain
A new study published in the journal PAIN by Dr. A. Amorim and her colleagues at the University of California San Diego examined how mindfulness meditation reduces pain. The findings help clarify whether mindfulness meditation is more effective than simple slow breathing for pain relief.
Read article