🌩️ 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.