🌩️ Storm Coming, Migraine Too: The Science of Weather-Triggered Headache

By Dr. Suraj Malhan, DO | Headache & Facial Pain Neurologist | @HeadacheGuru

Many of my patients tell me, "I have migraine every time a storm rolls in.” As a neurologist, I’ve heard it enough to know this isn’t just a coincidence - it is something worth exploring. While the evidence isn’t always clear-cut, recent studies and neuroscience are starting to validate what patients have sensed all along: the weather might actually be a trigger.

In this post, I’ll break down the latest research on how weather patterns — especially changes in barometric pressure — can influence migraine, and what we can do about it.

Weather as a Migraine Trigger: Patient-Reported Reality

Migraine is one of the most disabling neurological diseases globally, ranked as the #1 cause of disability in young women (GBD, 2019). According to a large meta-analysis of over 27,000 people, weather consistently ranks among the top four self-reported triggers for migraine attacks (Cephalalgia, Pellegrino et al., 2018).

But is it just a perception? Or is there a real biological basis?

Barometric Pressure and Migraine: What the Science Says

A 2024 review titled Whether Weather Matters with Migraine (Denney et al.) in Current Pain and Headache Reports summarizes compelling — though mixed — evidence linking weather patterns and migraine, with barometric pressure emerging as one of the most studied variables

  • A study by Katsuki et al. (2023) using AI and a headache tracking app found low barometric pressure = more headaches

  • Simulated low-pressure environments triggered headaches in healthy volunteers (Cephalalgia Reports, 2021)

  • Animal models show pressure drops activate pain pathways in the vestibular and trigeminal nuclei (PLOS One, 2019)

 Mechanisms likely involve:

  • Trigeminovascular system activation

  • CGRP increase during hypoxia (Front Neurol, 2022)

  • Serotonin fluctuations in response to weather ions (Lancet, 2002)

Other Weather Variables: Humidity, Lightning, Wind

  • 🌡️ Humidity ↑ = 28% ↑ odds of migraine onset (Li et al., 2019)

  • ⚡ Lightning storms = 31% ↑ in attacks (Martin et al., 2013)

  • 🌬️ High winds (e.g. Chinook winds) associated with increased migraine frequency (Cooke et al., 2000)

But weather is rarely the sole cause. Instead, it's often the final nudge in a “perfect storm” of triggers: sleep disruption, hormones, stress, and skipped meals.

What Can Patients Do?

Track Your Triggers Use apps like Migraine Buddy to correlate attacks with pressure changes or storms.

Pre-Treat When Storms Are Coming If you're sensitive, your doctor may recommend treating early to help reduce attacks.

Don’t Stack Triggers Stay hydrated, get good sleep, and avoid skipping meals on stormy days.

Stay Consistent The more stable your schedule, the better your brain can buffer against weather swings.

Final Thoughts: Weather Is Real — But It's Not Everything

Weather likely accounts for about 20% of migraine triggers — but it’s not about one factor alone. Your personal threshold and the accumulation of triggers matter most.

When patients say, “I feel a migraine coming before the rain,” I listen. That’s not a myth — that’s a signal. And when we track it, we can treat it more effectively.

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