The Surprising Reason Some Foods May Trigger Migraines

Some migraine-triggering foods -- like processed meats -- contain nitrates.
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In a new study, scientists found an association between the bacteria in people's mouths -- which could interact with foods that contain nitrates -- and migraines.

People who suffer from migraines often say that eating certain foods triggers their headaches, but a new study suggests that it might not always be the food per se — rather, the bacteria in the mouth may be playing a role.

The study found that people with migraines harbored more bacteria in their mouths that had the ability to modify chemicals called nitrates, compared to people without migraines.

Some migraine-triggering foods contain nitrates, including processed meats and green leafy vegetables, as well as certain medications.

The researchers hypothesized that having greater amounts of bacteria in the mouth that modify nitrates could contribute to headaches in some people. These bacteria help convert nitrates into nitric oxide, a chemical that is thought to play a role in headaches.

“Bacteria in the oral cavity may contribute migraine-triggering levels of nitric oxide,” the researchers wrote in the Oct. 18 issue of the journal mSystems. [5 Ways Gut Bacteria Affect Your Health]

Still, the study found only an association between these bacteria and migraines, and cannot prove that the bacteria can cause migraines. The authors said they hope that their study spurs more research into how oral bacteria could be connected to migraines.

For now, if people suspect that nitrates are triggering their migraines, they should try to avoid nitrates in their diet, study co-author Antonio Gonzalez, a programmer analyst at the University of California, San Diego, said in a statement.

For the study, the researchers analyzed 172 oral samples and nearly 2,000 fecal samples from healthy people who participated in the American Gut Project, one of the largest crowd-sourced science projects in the U.S. Thousands of people in the general public contributed samples to the project to have their microbiomes analyzed.

Original article on Live Science.

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Before You Go

This Is What A Migraine Physically Feels Like
"It leaves my brain feeling like a wrung out washrag."(01 of10)
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(credit:Alissa Scheller / The Huffington Post)
"I describe it like something or someone standing on a manhole cover pressing down on my head creating a vice around my head."(02 of10)
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(credit:Alissa Scheller / The Huffington Post)
"Like a hot dull nail being hammered into the right side of my head just above the temple."(03 of10)
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(credit:Alissa Scheller / The Huffington Post)
"It feels like I'm pushing my head against a pallet of bricks."(04 of10)
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(credit:Alissa Scheller / The Huffington Post)
"Migraines feel as if my brain is being rhythmically pounded by a boxer wearing gloves, pummeling with all their might, over and over and over."(05 of10)
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(credit:Alissa Scheller / The Huffington Post)
"It feels like someone has put a bowling ball on my eye and is pressing on it."(06 of10)
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(credit:Alissa Scheller / The Huffington Post)
"Like the pounding of a drum inside my head."(07 of10)
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(credit:Alissa Scheller / The Huffington Post)
"Like an ice pick that jabs at my head."(08 of10)
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(credit:Alissa Scheller / The Huffington Post)
"It's like a tire pump constantly filling up a balloon of agony that never pops, but pulsates for hours on end."(09 of10)
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(credit:Alissa Scheller / The Huffington Post)
"The only way I can describe it is that it's as if my brain has swollen and it's trying to push through my skull."(10 of10)
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(credit:Alissa Scheller / The Huffington Post)

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