Think you can fix a systemic neurovascular disorder with neck work alone? Think again. While manual therapy creates a vital "window of opportunity" by reducing threat, the latest research confirms that building a more resilient "engine" is the secret to long-term migraine prophylactic success.
This infographic breaks down the Lemmens et al. meta-analysis, revealing how moderate aerobic exercise (walking, cycling, jogging) consistently reduces migraine frequency and pain intensity through systemic desensitization. We're moving past the "bone out of place" myth and toward a capacity-based model of rehab.
Evidence-Based Systemic Desensitization
A systematic review & meta-analysis found moderate-quality evidence that aerobic exercise slightly reduces migraine frequency.
-0.6 ± 0.3
Migraine days per month
Measured at 10–12 weeks vs control
20–27% Shorter
20–54% Lower
Not a magic bullet: It is a modestly effective, non-pharmacological prophylactic option, not an instant cure.
Evidence Quality: Data is strongest for days/month; findings for intensity and duration are heterogeneous and based on lower quality evidence.
The Protocol: Programs followed ACSM guidelines: ≥10 weeks, moderate-intensity training (walking, cycling, jogging).
Improves descending pain inhibition and overall systemic fitness.
Synergistic effect: works well alongside medications like amitriptyline.
Use manual therapy to transiently reduce threat and peripheral inputs.
Mode: Walking, cycling, jogging.
Dose: 10–12 weeks, moderate intensity (ACSM guidelines).
Frame as a small but meaningful reduction over weeks. Prioritize consistency over "perfect" intensity.
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