5 Surprising Reasons Blood Sugar Spikes Could Be Fueling Your Migraine Attacks (And How To Eat Sugar If You Really Crave It)
Episode Description
Could your sugar cravings be quietly setting the stage for your next migraine, even if you think you “handle carbs just fine”?
In this episode of Migraine Heroes Podcast, host Diane Ducarme explores one of the most misunderstood migraine triggers: blood sugar instability. Not sugar itself but the spikes, crashes, and nervous-system stress that come with it.
Many people with migraines are told to “just cut sugar.” But migraine brains don’t respond well to restriction or perfection. They respond to rhythm, stability, and context.
This episode breaks down why blood sugar swings matter and how to work with cravings instead of fighting them.
In this episode, you’ll learn:
🍬 Why blood sugar instability can be a silent migraine trigger even when labs look “normal” and symptoms feel unrelated
🧠 The five surprising ways glucose swings stress the migraine brain, including insulin spikes, hormonal signaling, dehydration effects, and low-grade brain inflammation
⚡ How rapid rises and drops in blood sugar lower your migraine threshold, priming pain pathways hours before the headache starts
🍓 How to eat sugar when you crave it without fueling attacks, using simple pairing strategies that calm the brain instead of spiking it
This episode blends neuroscience, metabolic insight, and Eastern medicine wisdom to help you move beyond fear-based food rules and toward sugar intelligence.
If you’ve ever felt shaky, irritable, foggy, or headachy after eating or wondered why “balanced meals” still don’t feel stable, this episode is for you.
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References:
- Brain Glucose Metabolism & Migraine (Del Moro et al., 2022): Del Moro and colleagues reviewed evidence linking impaired brain glucose metabolism and mitochondrial dysfunction with migraine pathophysiology. Read more here.
- Glycemic Variability in Chronic Migraine (Nelson, 2025): Nelson’s CGM study found greater glucose variability in people with chronic migraine, suggesting unstable glucose control may precede attacks. Read more here.
- Glucose Changes During Migraine Attacks (Zhang et al., 2020): This study showed plasma glucose levels rise during migraine attacks compared to interictal periods. Read more here.
- Metabolic Dysfunction & Migraine (Sun, 2025): Disruptions in glucose/insulin metabolism and insulin resistance may play a role in migraine development and severity. Read more here.
- Irregular Meals & Migraine (Legesse et al., 2025): Irregular meal timing and fasting — which can cause hypoglycemia — are associated with migraine flares. Read more here
- Increased Glucose and Neurovascular Dysfunction (Rodrigues et al., 2017): This study shows that elevated glucose levels impair neurovascular regulation and sympathetic balance in people with metabolic syndrome, offering a mechanistic link between glucose instability, vascular stress, and migraine vulnerability. Read more here.
- Acute Glucose Variability and Cognitive Decline (Chi et al., PLOS ONE, 2023): This systematic review and meta-analysis found that rapid glucose fluctuations are associated with cognitive decline in type 2 diabetes, highlighting how glucose instability—rather than average glucose alone—can stress the brain and nervous system. Read more here.
- Glucose Dysregulation and Glycemic Phenotyping in Chronic Migraine (Nelson et al., Frontiers in Neurology, 2026): Using continuous glucose monitoring, this study identified distinct glycemic patterns in people with chronic migraine, suggesting that glucose variability may act as a metabolic trigger contributing to migraine frequency and severity. Read more here.
Disclaimer: This podcast is for informational purposes only and does not substitute for providing medical advice. Always consult your healthcare professional before making any health-related decisions.
For women, men, and children who suffer from migraine disease, Migraine Heroes is your go-to resource for understanding, managing, and overcoming migraine attacks.
We cover all types of migraines and related headaches, including primary and secondary migraines, chronic migraines, and cluster migraines. We dive deep into the complexities of migraine with aura and migraine without aura, as well as rarer forms like hemiplegic migraine, retinal migraine, and acephalgic migraine (silent migraine). Our discussions also extend to cervicogenic headaches, ice pick headaches, and pressure headaches, which often mimic migraine or contribute to overall migraine burden.