Migraines: Neurological Disease or Complex Trigger Response?
Migraines, customarily recognized as a straightforward neurological disease, an internal malfunction of the brain that causes recurring attacks of pain and sensitivity. This explanation is so prevalent in medicine that it often goes unopposed. Nevertheless, carries a deeper assumption that functions like a quiet medical default: that migraines are primarily a fixed disease inside the brain, and that everything else--stress, sleep, food, environment--is just secondary noise. This article challenges that assumption. Not by rejecting science but by asking a sharper question:



