Menstrual / Hormonal Headache
A significant number of women experience headaches that correlate with hormonal changes of their menstrual cycle. Menstruation, use of birth control pills, pregnancy and menopause can all affect headaches. Fortunately, headaches stop in 2 out of 3 women during pregnancy and after menopause. In many women, the precipitous drop in estrogen is thought to be responsible for premenstrual headaches.
There is significant evidence that magnesium levels are reduced during the premenstrual phase and magnesium deficiency has been linked with blood vessel constriction and with the release of biochemicals that set in motion pain-causing inflammation.
In my studies, up to 50% of people with migraine headaches are magnesium deficient and this deficiency strikes women more often than men. Low magnesium levels also seem to be responsible for other PMS symptoms.
» See other headache causes.
→ Click here to learn more about Dr. Mauskop’s Migralex™.
Patented Breakthrough Formula For Headaches
Strongest combination medication available without a prescription
Dr. Mauskop's Migralex works because it:
- contains Magnesium;
- has a maximum dose of aspirin;
- is formulated to allow full absorption of ingredients;
- has a special fast dissolving formula to relieve pain faster;
- contains the optimal proportion of ingredients;
- is safer, contains no caffeine, no sodium, no preservatives;
- is gentle on the stomach;
- normalizes dozens of chemical reactions;
- interferes with substances in the body that cause inflammation;
- prevents arteries from going into sudden spasm;
- helps keep cell membranes stable.
- Rapid release formula
- Fast acting
- No caffeine
- No sodium
- Gentle on the stomach
- No preservatives
- No artificial flavors
-
I have been getting severe headaches for over 30 years and I was shocked that this worked. It eased the pain in about 40 minutes and never returned. Thank you!
LeeAnn R.
-
Migralex uniquely combines the benefits of two safe and effective products, and will deliver excellent relief from headaches.
Anne Remmes, MD
Columbia University Medical School



