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Chronic migraine is more than an occasional severe headache. When pain days become frequent, work, sleep, concentration, and overall quality of life can all deteriorate quickly.
Migraine Botox is not a cosmetic appointment repurposed for headaches. It is a medical treatment approach for selected chronic migraine patients, based on standardized injection patterns and long-term clinical evidence.
The classic candidate is an adult with very frequent migraine days, especially when headaches occur 15 or more days per month or when preventive medications have not provided enough control or have caused limiting side effects.
Accurate diagnosis matters. Not every headache disorder should be treated with this protocol, which is why symptom history, trigger pattern, and sometimes neurology input are just as important as the injection plan itself.
The benefit is not explained only by muscle relaxation. Botox is thought to reduce the release of certain pain-signaling chemicals and lower peripheral sensitization, which may reduce both the frequency and severity of attacks.
In practice, injections follow defined points across the forehead, temples, back of the head, neck, and trapezius areas. The goal is not a frozen expression but a lower migraine burden with normal day-to-day facial movement preserved.
Dr. Gemici: For migraine, the value is not in simply doing injections. The value is in making the right diagnosis, using the right protocol, and tracking the response honestly between sessions.
Botox received FDA approval for chronic migraine after the PREEMPT trials. Many patients see a meaningful reduction in headache days, but the full picture is not always clear after only one cycle.
Treatment is commonly repeated about every 12 weeks. A fair assessment often becomes clearer after several cycles, when headache frequency, intensity, and medication use can be compared more reliably over time.
Pregnancy, breastfeeding, active infection at the injection site, and certain neuromuscular disorders are common reasons to postpone treatment. Atypical headache features or neurological red flags should also be assessed before proceeding.
If the response is limited, the next step may be to review the diagnosis, adjust preventive medication strategy, consider CGRP-based options, or coordinate more closely with a neurologist. Botox is strong for the right patient, but it is not the only pathway.
Some patients notice early change within the first couple of weeks, but the most reliable assessment usually comes after a full treatment cycle and comparison of headache days.
No. It is most commonly used for chronic migraine with frequent attacks, and the decision should follow proper medical evaluation.
Yes. Migraine Botox is usually performed as a repeated protocol about every 12 weeks when the patient is benefiting and there are no contraindications.

Trusted & Professional
Dr. Hamza Gemici is a medical aesthetic physician based in Ataşehir, Istanbul. His practice focuses on natural anti-aging and subtle facial harmonization using botulinum toxin, dermal fillers, periocular rejuvenation and skin quality procedures. All treatments are performed with FDA-approved products under physician-guided protocols.