Acupuncture Migraine Treatment in Vancouver
Three days. That is how long your last migraine attack lasted. Three days of throbbing on one side of your head so bad you could not look at your phone. Nausea for three days straight. Curtains drawn. Phone face-down because the screen light alone made you want to cry. And when it finally broke? You did not feel better. You felt emptied out — like your brain had been wrung dry and hung up to drip.
That is not a bad headache. That is migraine. And it is a health condition that is more than just pain — it is a neurological disorder that hijacks your entire system.
If you are reading this from Vancouver and you are sick of migraine running your life, Honor Wellness can help. Acupuncture goes after the frequency — fewer migraine episodes per month. It goes after the intensity — so when a migraine attack does land, it does not flatten you the way it used to. And it shortens the window — so the symptoms do not drag on for days.

What Causes a Migraine Attack?
It is not like a regular headache. A regular headache is dull pressure. It brings intense throbbing pain — usually on one side — with a pulsing feeling that gets worse when you move. During an episode, light hurts. Sound hurts. Smells can make you gag. Some people vomit. Some cannot speak properly. Some lose vision temporarily. This is a full-system event, not just a sore head.
The numbers are staggering. The NINDS and the NIH put migraine prevalence at around 12 percent of the population — one of the most disabling neurological conditions on the planet. The American Migraine Foundation ranks migraine as the third most common disease worldwide. Third. And despite that, most people living with migraine are still bouncing between pills that sort of work and doctors who shrug and say stress less. That is not treatment. That is a holding pattern.
What actually sets off a migraine attack? That depends entirely on you. Migraine triggers vary wildly from person to person — which is a huge part of why this condition is so maddening to pin down. For some people it is stress. For others it is a garbage night of sleep, or a glass of red wine, or aged cheese, or flickering fluorescent lights at the office. Strong perfume. A sudden weather shift. Skipping breakfast because you were running late.
Think of it like a bucket. Every trigger adds water. Stress — splash. Bad sleep — splash. Hormones shifting — splash. Eventually the bucket overflows and the attack fires. Some people have a big bucket and can absorb a lot before it tips. Others have a shallow one that spills at the first thing that goes wrong.
Once a migraine kicks in, the blood vessels in your head swell up and get inflamed. The nerves wrapped around them freak out and start blasting pain signals — sometimes for hours, sometimes for three full days. Some people get a heads-up before the pain arrives. Weird visual stuff — zigzag lines, blind spots, flashing lights. Tingling in the fingers or the side of the face. Words that suddenly will not come out right. Doctors call that aura. Migraine with aura and migraine without aura are both common — and acupuncture works for both.
How Does Acupuncture Help With Migraine?
So how does acupuncture actually go after migraine? It taps into the same neurological pathways that migraine attacks run through. Needles — thin, sterile, barely thicker than a hair — go into points that are wired to the nerves and blood vessels tangled up in your migraine pain. What happens next is your system dumps endorphins and natural pain-fighting chemicals into the system. At the same time, those overactive nerve signals that keep pulling the trigger on each attack? Acupuncture dials them down.
It reduces inflammation. It relaxes the blood vessels in your head and neck that tighten and swell during a migraine headache.
Here is something wild — brain imaging studies have literally watched this happen. People with chronic migraine have specific abnormal firing patterns in their neural pathways. After acupuncture, those patterns change. Everything quiets down. Shifts back toward a state where it is not treating every minor signal like a five-alarm fire. That is not theory. That is brain scans before and after.
The clinical research lines up too. A 2025 meta-analysis pulled data from 19 trials and found acupuncture beat conventional medications for cutting migraine frequency, intensity, and how long each episode drags on — and with fewer side effects. Electroacupuncture — gentle current through the needles — showed the strongest results for keeping migraine from coming back. Doctors are paying attention. More and more of them recognize acupuncture as legitimate medicine for migraine prevention.
Already on migraine medications? Triptans, beta blockers, anti-seizure medicines, CGRP inhibitors? Acupuncture works right alongside all of them. A lot of our patients end up reducing their dosage over time as migraine frequency drops — but we never make that call without coordinating with your doctor first.
Here is the part that changes everything for people: migraine management is not about surviving each attack. It is about what happens in between — the weeks between episodes where you are either building resilience or just waiting for the next one to hit.
Acupuncture builds resilience. Weekly sessions at first — then we space them out as things improve. What is happening under the hood is your nervous system learning to stop overreacting. That bucket we talked about? Acupuncture makes it bigger. Your migraine threshold climbs. Triggers that used to guarantee an attack? They stop tipping you over. The attacks space out. And when one does break through, it lands lighter and leaves faster.
Managing Migraine Triggers: Tips for Prevention
Acupuncture handles the clinical side. But what you do at home between sessions matters just as much. Here are some tips from our migraine patients who have gotten their frequency way down.
The migraine diary — do not skip this. Write down what you ate, how you slept, your stress that day, where you are in your cycle. Do it for a month and migraine triggers you never noticed will jump off the page. Patterns almost always show up once you start looking. Water — boring advice but it matters. Dehydration is one of the most common and most fixable migraine triggers out there and most people are not drinking enough even when they think they are. Sleep consistency — your system hates surprises. Going to bed and waking up at the same time every day — even weekends — helps it regulate itself. Screens — the blue light and glare situation is real. Migraine symptoms get worse for a lot of people after hours of screen exposure, especially at night. Move your body — gentle exercise between attacks helps reduce frequency over time.
Migraine diagnosis is important too. If you have never been formally diagnosed, we recommend seeing your doctor. A proper diagnosis rules out other headache disorders and helps your medical professionals build the right treatment plan. It is often confused with tension headache, cluster headache, and sinus headache — and the treatment for each is different.
Why Choose Honor Wellness for Migraine Relief?
We go deep. Your full migraine history — how often, how bad, aura patterns, known triggers, every medication and medicine you have tried, what helped a little, what did nothing, what made things worse. All of it goes into your file before a single needle goes in. Your treatment plan gets built around your specific migraine pattern — because the protocol that works for someone with menstrual migraine is totally different from the one that works for someone with chronic daily migraine. A small team of dedicated migraine advocates in the Vancouver acupuncture community helped shape our approach, and we keep updating it as new migraine research comes out.
We track your migraine symptoms session by session. Fewer migraine days. Less intense migraine headaches. Shorter migraine attacks. Better sleep between episodes. These are the markers we watch for — and most patients start seeing them within the first few weeks.
If you are looking for a way to prevent migraines from taking over your life — or even just to take back a few days a month that migraine has been stealing — acupuncture at Honor Wellness is worth trying. We are open seven days a week, we direct bill most extended health plans, and we coordinate with your doctor to make sure your migraine care is fully connected.
Living with migraine does not have to mean losing every time. Book a migraine visit and find out what fewer migraine days actually feels like.
It is one of those conditions where people feel alone — like nobody understands how much a migraine episode takes from you. But this condition is incredibly common. Millions of people deal with migraine every year. The difference between someone who suffers through migraine month after month and someone who gets it under control usually comes down to one thing — getting the right migraine support and migraine help early enough.
At Honor Wellness we see every type of migraine pattern. Migraine with aura and without. Chronic migraine. Menstrual migraine. Vestibular migraine. Abdominal conditions in younger patients. Each migraine type — with its own symptoms — needs a different approach — and each migraine treatment plan at our clinic reflects that. We do not treat migraine the same way twice because no two people experience migraine the same way.
Your pattern is unique. Your situation is unique. How your migraine condition responds to treatment is unique. That is why cookie-cutter care does not work — and why personalized acupuncture does.
If migraine has been stealing your days, your energy, and your patience — book a migraine acupuncture consultation with Honor Wellness. Migraine — your migraine pattern — does not have to own your calendar.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the primary factors that trigger and cause migraines?
The primary factors that trigger and cause migraines involve a complex interaction between neurological, hormonal, and environmental influences. Common causes include hormonal fluctuations, chronic stress, poor sleep, dehydration, dietary triggers such as caffeine and alcohol, strong sensory stimuli like bright lights and loud sounds, and prolonged screen exposure. Identifying and managing personal triggers is an essential part of reducing migraine frequency and severity, and acupuncture has been shown to be highly effective in addressing many of these underlying contributing factors.
What symptoms indicate that a migraine requires emergency medical attention?
Certain symptoms indicate that a migraine requires immediate emergency medical attention and should never be ignored. If your headache comes on suddenly and severely unlike any you have experienced before, or is accompanied by fever, stiff neck, confusion, vision loss, difficulty speaking, numbness, or weakness on one side of the body, seek emergency care right away. These symptoms may indicate a more serious underlying condition such as a stroke or meningitis that requires urgent medical evaluation and treatment.
Is there a direct connection between stress and migraine episodes?
There is a very direct connection between stress and migraine episodes. Stress is one of the most commonly reported migraine triggers and affects the body by causing hormonal changes, muscle tension, and alterations in brain chemistry that can activate the migraine pathway. Chronic stress keeps the nervous system in a heightened state of reactivity, making the brain more susceptible to migraine attacks. Acupuncture is particularly effective at calming the nervous system, reducing stress hormones, and breaking the cycle of stress related migraines over time.
Why does the body crave sugar following a migraine attack?
The body craves sugar following a migraine attack because the brain consumes a significant amount of glucose during the intense neurological activity of a migraine episode. This leaves blood sugar levels depleted once the attack subsides, triggering a strong craving for quick energy in the form of sugar. The body is essentially trying to restore its energy reserves as quickly as possible. Reaching for nourishing whole foods rather than processed sugars is a healthier way to replenish energy and support recovery after a migraine.