Migraines Are Getting in the Way
Migraines can affect far more than just your head.
You may find yourself planning your life around symptoms, constantly monitoring for triggers, or pushing through exhaustion just to get through the day. Some people experience intense head pain. Others struggle more with brain fog, sensory sensitivity, dizziness, nausea, or fatigue that lingers long after the migraine itself.
Over time, migraines can begin affecting work, school, relationships, sleep, concentration, and your overall sense of stability. Many people start feeling trapped in cycles of anticipation, stress, and nervous system overwhelm, never fully knowing when the next migraine will hit. And when symptoms become chronic or long-lasting, it can feel frustrating, isolating, and exhausting trying to explain what you’re experiencing to others.
Migraines are not “just headaches.” They involve complex interactions between the brain, nervous system, sensory processing systems, stress physiology, sleep, and regulation networks.
Support can help you better understand these patterns and work toward greater stability, regulation, and quality of life.
What to Expect When Receiving Treatment for Migraines
Assessment and Brain Mapping
Personalized Treatment Plan
Ongoing Monitoring and Adjustment
What Migraines Can Look Like
Migraines can present differently from person to person.
Common symptoms include:
- recurring headaches or migraine attacks
- light or sound sensitivity
- nausea or dizziness
- visual disturbances or aura
- brain fog or slowed thinking
- neck tension or pressure
- fatigue or post-migraine exhaustion
- difficulty concentrating
- sensory overwhelm
- sleep disruption
Some individuals experience occasional migraines, while others live with chronic or near-daily symptoms.
Migraines may also overlap with:
- concussion history
- chronic stress or burnout
- anxiety or nervous system hyperarousal
- hormonal changes
- sensory sensitivity
- sleep dysregulation
Why Migraines Can Become Chronic
Migraines are not simply caused by stress, tension, or “trying too hard.”
They involve nervous system dysregulation and changes in how the brain processes sensory information, activation, and recovery.
For some individuals, the nervous system becomes increasingly sensitive over time. This can lower the brain’s threshold for triggering migraines and make recovery more difficult. Sleep disruption, chronic stress, sensory overload, concussion history, hormonal shifts, and prolonged nervous system activation can all contribute to this cycle.
Even when there is not an active migraine, the brain and nervous system may remain in a heightened or dysregulated state.
Understanding these patterns can help guide more targeted support.
How Therapy and Neurotherapy Can Help
At Foothills Integrative, migraine support focuses on nervous system regulation, symptom management, and improving quality of life.
Neurotherapy is a gentle, non-invasive way to support your brain’s ability to regulate and function more efficiently. It works by encouraging healthier brainwave patterns and improving communication between brain regions. For individuals experiencing migraines, neurotherapy may help:
- reduce frequency and intensity of headaches
- reduce stress physiology and hyperarousal
- decrease sensory sensitivity
- improve sleep and recovery
- support emotional and nervous system regulation
- enhance overall cognitive clarity and energy
Because treatment is guided by your individual brain map, it is tailored specifically to your unique neurological patterns.
For some individuals, psychotherapy can also help address the emotional impact of chronic migraines, including anxiety, frustration, grief, or changes in identity and functioning.
Our Approach to Migraine Treatment at Foothills Integrative
Migraine recovery often benefits from addressing both brain regulation and the broader nervous system.
At Foothills Integrative, treatment may include:
Assessing brain activity to identify patterns contributing to migraines and nervous system dysregulation. Based on these findings, we develop a personalized neurotherapy treatment protocol.
Targeted neuromodulation approaches may include transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS), transcranial Alternating Current Stimulation (tACS), pulsed Electromagnetic Field stimulation (pEMF), transcranial Noise Stimulation (tPNS / tBNS), Photobiomodulation (PBM).
These approaches aim to support the brain’s natural capacity for neuroplastic change, helping reduce hypersensitivity and improve regulation.
Migraines are often influenced by stress, trauma, and nervous system load. Psychotherapy can support stress regulation and trigger awareness, nervous system down regulation, processing of underlying emotional or physiological contributors.
Neurotherapy can enhance neuroplasticity, making therapeutic work more effective and longer lasting.
Our Therapists Who Support Migraine
Take the Next Step
If support for migraine feels like it might be the right fit, the best first step is a conversation. We offer a free 20-minute consultation to help you explore fit and ask questions.
No pressure, just presence.
In-person sessions in Okotoks, and virtual therapy across Alberta.
