Neural therapy is a treatment method used to correct complaints that occur as a result of disruption of the electrical current of cells in any part of the body.
In neural therapy, a short-acting local anesthetic called procaine is diluted with isotonic serum and injected into certain areas.
The purpose of this application is not anesthesia. Local anesthetic applied to the areas with complaints stimulates the autonomic nervous system in that area; It regulates blood flow, lymphatic flow and nerve electrical current.
Neural therapy is applied to migraine, especially: headaches that do not respond to medications, headaches that become chronic, and headaches that increase due to painkillers.
Neural therapy in migraine is performed in consecutive sessions. The patient's complaints are identified, and after the root causes of the migraine are determined, treatment is arranged for at least three and at most ten sessions.