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News of the monthCelebrities and migraine, July 3, 2005By Ian HodderFamous names give a public face to the migraine condition, writes Ian Hodder, journalist in New York City, in a Special for the MSNBC website. Public names give Rock 'n' roll and standup comedy are the last things a migraine sufferer wants when an episode strikes. But even when you seek relief by lying down in a dark, quiet place that's blissfully away from other people, Elvis Presley, Whoopi Goldberg and other celebrity migraineurs are always there, at least in spirit. [more] Sorry, due to extensive design work we have suspended this dosier for some timeNote from Thursday July 07. 2005 Now that was a real headache, January 3, 2005By Gordon MacfarlaneA sympathetic account of a female migraine sufferer's post-New-Year's-party "really bad migraine" by columnist Gordon Macfarlane from CNews, CANOE - Your Internet Network. "As one whose headaches are largely limited to hangovers I cannot fathom what a sickening event a two-day migraine must be. The aura itself sounds like a prolonged version of the few seconds after crotching yourself on your bike, when you're thinking 'this is gonna hurt.' The following mini 'Hiroshima' in your cerebrum is often accompanied by stomach-burning nausea, room-spinning dizziness and absolute indifference as to whether you live or die." [more] Aversion to contemporary art, December 15, 2004By Debbie Ayles and Arnold WilkinsA Sciart project that aims to explore the creative process in non-representational art, investigating why some 'art' in the general sense can affect people - art that 'catches the eye and hits the head'. The project is a collaboration between the artist , who's paintings are inspired by her own migraine experiences, and the scientist Arnold Wilkins at the University of Essex. Migraine and creativity, November 25, 2004By Anton van AmerongenThe Dutch biologist and writer Anton van Amerongen ("Smell, the secret seducer", coauthored with Piet Vroon, 1994) records his own creative experience of transforming the visual patterns of his visual migraine auras in his drawings of pastel and colour pencils. [more, only in Dutch] Migraine and Inspiration, November 15, 2004By Peter van VugtLewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass have, since their publication in 1865 and 1871, been interpreted in the most various (and curious) ways. As early as 1952 Caro W. Lippman pointed out that the author of the two Alice books might have suffered from migraine attacks, preceded or accompanied by body image disturbances. Peter van Vugt's paper "Migraine and Inspiration - C.L. Dodgson's migraine and Lewis Carroll's literary inspiration: a neurolinguistic perspective", published in the journal Humanising Language Teaching (2004; 6 (no. 4)), argues that not only the author's body image disturbances served as a source of inspiration, but that also the visual and auditory illusions, false perceptions and sensory distortions, which the author may have experienced during some of his migraine attacks, were crucial in creating and describing the strangeness of Wonderland. [more] Psychic powers that enable people to see auras around others may simply be a quirk of the brain, October 18, 2004By Jamie WardSupposed psychic powers that enable people to see "auras" around others may simply be a quirk of the brain, according to Jamie Ward's study of a rare form of synaesthesia where some people see colourful "auras" around their loved ones, as reported in the October issue of the journal "Cognitive Neuropsychology" (2004; 21: 761-772). The study of this genuine, if unusual, form of synaesthesia expands our knowledge about neuropsychological symptoms that can explain the supposedly paranormal power of seeing "auras", which corresponds to a visual experience that may similarly be produced by a number of visual migraine aura symptoms such as pericentral fortification spectra or the corona phenomenon. [more] Exhibition "Migraine and Art" in Skien, Norway, October 19, 2004By Ola Kr. GjertsenThe exhibition "Migraine and Art", dedicated to the memory of the late Derek Robinson, presents a selection of 30 paintings and drawings from the Migraine Art collection (by courtesy of the Migraine Action Association and Boehringer Ingelheim Limited) at the Hospital Telemark in Skien, Norway. The show is on display from October 19 to November 19, 2004. [more, only in Norwegian] Migrainous complex hallucinations in 10-year-old patient, September 30, 2004By Marcel RomanosConsidering a prevalence of three to ten percent migraine in children is not a rare disease. Visual auras as a characteristic of classical migraine are often described in literature. However, most of these are elementary geometrical hallucinations, whilst descriptions of complex hallucinations are rarely to find. A recent case report describes a 10-year-old patient who reports a complex visual hallucination during a migraine attack, demonstrating the great variety of the migraine aura.[more] The neuropsychology of visual artistic production, September 12, 2004By Anjan ChatterjeeWhat happens to visual artists with neuropsychological disturbances? This review, published in the new issue of the journal "Neuropsychologia" (2004; 42: 1568-1583), examines artistic production in individuals with a variety of neurological disorders including migraine with aura. In addition to deficits, neuropsychological syndromes may be associated with positive phenomena, which can serve to inspire artists. The review makes clear that artists with neuropsychological disturbances do not necessarily produce art of lesser quality. Rather, their art may change in content or in style, sometimes in surprising and aesthetically pleasing ways. [more] Migraine Art: Different Ways of Seeing, August 25, 2004By Petra KuppersThis year's annual meeting of the Society for Literature & Science (SLS) in Durham, NC, will include a session on "Invisible Fantasies", featuring a lecture by Petra Kuppers on "Migraine Art: Different Ways of Seeing", October 15, 2004. Professor Kuppers' study explores Migraine Art from the Humanities' point of view, giving testimony of the impact of Derek Robinson's Migraine Art concept not only for medical research, but also for Cultural Studies. [more] Raising children as atheists, July 15, 2004By Marvin MinskyOne day, at age 17, I was walking alone at night during a snowstorm in a singularly quiet place.[more] Of mice and migraines, June 21, 2004By Edward ChronicleReport of the 2004 meeting of the American Headache Society held in Vancouver. Migraine, June 16, 2004By Margaret ChoKorean American comedian, actress and political activist Margaret Cho, who made television history by being the first Asian American to have a television series (All American Girl) based around her, has published an account of her experiences as a migraine sufferer in her daily weblog. [more] Migraines Create Financial Headaches, WebMD Health, May 11, 2004Outpatient Visits, Pharmacy Costs, Used Sick Time Lead to Higher Health Costs. [more] Study probes visual migraine triggers, BBC News, April 10, 2004,Some migraine sufferers develop an attack after seeing certain patterns such as stripes. A team of psychologists at Birkbeck College in London are beginning a two-year study to explore exactly what happens within the brain and the visual system when the eyes focus on these patterns and, crucially, how that culminates in an agonising headache [more]. Author: Markus Dahlem
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