Hey Eve! thanks for sharing this... I had to look as well (as I've been diagnosed with 3 different kinds of migraines -- non-AN related) so it definately piqued my interest.
For the back of the head process, it doesn't sound too far off from Chiari 1 decompression surgery.. and for those I know that had CM1 surgery, their migraines also aleviated, so there has to be something to it.
the article does note a "criteria" for patients, which I found interesting:
"At this time, not all migraine sufferers are eligible for surgery. Candidates for the procedure must experience migraines caused by a specific trigger site and
must have benefited from Botox treatment consistently over the course of several months. Three of the most common trigger sites include the frontal (forehead), occipital (back of head) and temporal (temples) region. Once the trigger site is identified, the surgery is then performed to release nerve tension around that given region."
The part in "bold" is what intrigues me... I'd be curious as to why they deem a criteria for successful Botox treatments to be part of the criteria... just curiousity killing the cat
glad to hear this gentleman found relief through this procedure....
thanks again for sharing,
Phyl