I have chronic migraines — formally diagnosed, tracked in a headache diary, under neurologist care. At baseline, I was averaging 8 migraine days per month despite being on topiramate (Topamax) 100mg daily. My neurologist added Ajovy (fremanezumab) injections, which helped somewhat, but I was still at 5-6 migraine days per month. My quality of life was significantly impacted.
I brought up black seed oil to my neurologist after reading about thymoquinone's anti-inflammatory and analgesic properties in peer-reviewed literature. She was neutral — "it probably will not help, but it should not hurt at reasonable doses." I appreciated the honesty.
I started 500mg capsules three times daily with meals. Continued all existing medications unchanged.
Month 1: 6 migraine days. No change from recent baseline. I was not discouraged — I had committed to a three-month trial.
Month 2: 4 migraine days. This caught my attention, though one month does not establish a pattern with migraines — they are notoriously variable.
Month 3: 3 migraine days. And critically, the intensity of the migraines that did occur seemed lower. My usual pattern was a 7-8/10 pain level that required triptan medication. Two of the three migraines in month three were 5/10 and I managed them with ibuprofen alone.
Month 4-5: Averaging 2-3 migraine days per month. My neurologist noted the improvement and, while appropriately cautious about attributing it solely to the supplement, agreed it was clinically meaningful. We are now discussing whether to attempt a reduction in topiramate dose, which would be life-changing given its cognitive side effects.
I cannot prove causation. Migraines wax and wane, and I am on multiple preventive therapies. But the temporal correlation with adding black seed oil is strong, and the anti-inflammatory mechanism is plausible for migraine, which is increasingly understood as a neuroinflammatory condition. I will continue taking it.