Don’t pat strange dogs – Updated

While out and about I always say hello to the dogs I meet, and most of them want to be friendly. I have patted hundreds of them over the years, and never been bitten – until last week. I was walking past a cafe where a medium sized black dog was sitting with his family at an outside table. Our eyes met. I began to approach him, assuming he wanted a pat, but he suddenly lunged forward and sank his teeth into my hand. It was a deep bite and very painful. I went into shock and almost fainted. The dog’s devastated owner and the cafe staff were very helpful, bringing me water and putting iodine and a plaster on the wound. After a while I felt well enough to continue on my way.

The pain continued all day, and by next morning my whole hand was red and swollen. My husband came with me to the emergency department of our local hospital. I was seen by a specialist nurse who gave me a tetanus booster and some blood tests, arranged for a hand X-Ray and admission to the orthopaedic ward.

The ward was full, so I spent the first day receiving my intravenous antibiotics in the corridor of a crowded and noisy medical assessment unit. I was transferred to a spare bed in a gynaecology assessment unit overnight, and finally reached the orthopaedic ward before lunchtime next day. This was not ideal but the important thing was having been promptly started on treatment, without which I realise I could have lost an arm or even died.

Being in hospital was a new experience for me and not nearly so bad as I expected. All the staff I encountered were skilled, efficient and kind. It was interesting to chat to other patients, and good to receive visits and messages from family and friends. I felt surprisingly well during my stay but it was a while before the cellulitis began to resolve. I was scheduled for surgical drainage on the third day, but by then the operation was judged to be unnecessary and I was discharged home to continue on oral medication for another week.

Dogs usually bite because they feel threatened, and it is those who have been abused as puppies who are more likely to become aggressive in later life. The owner has kept in touch and I hope to meet him again to find out something about the culprit’s background and character, and try to understand why I provoked him. I will be more cautious in future about patting strange dogs.

Update March 2024

Three months after the events described above, I arranged to have coffee – in a different café – with the family of the dog that bit me. As I suspected, Baxter (not his real name) had been cruelly treated in early life, during that vital period from about 8-16 weeks which can make or mar a dog’s temperament. He was born overseas in a puppy mill, transported long distances, and surrendered to a rescue centre before being adopted by his present owners. Even after some years in a loving forever home, he still has some behaviour problems, and is now having professional therapy. When I saw him at a distance he regarded me suspiciously. I have let go of any fantasies about making friends with Baxter, but seeing him and his family again gave me a worthwhile sense of “closure”, and I wish them well on the long journey of rehabilitation for a dog who has been so damaged by early abuse. By the way my hand wounds have healed well, leaving just a tiny scar to remind me of what happened. 

Food, drink, migraine and me

Photo by Chelsea Pridham on Unsplash

This is a draft extract from a book, based on my personal experience of migraine, which I am currently writing and hope to publish next year. I would like to include some short contributions from other people too, so if you have anything you would like to share about this or any other aspect of migraine, please leave a comment below or write to me through the contact page of my website jenniferbarraclough.com.

People who are vulnerable to migraine often report that dietary factors – foods, drinks, and meal patterns – can trigger their attacks, and this is certainly true in my case. Eating cheese is the worst thing for me. It took many years to recognise this, which now seems strange, but because it was something I used to eat almost every day when I was younger I didn’t notice a connection. Also, this was years before it was possible to look up health information on the internet, and we were not taught much in medical school about relationships between diet and disease. Cheese, especially strong aged ones, is implicated for other migraineurs too and this is believed to be because it contains high levels of a biogenic amine called tyramine. This substance gets metabolised in the gut by an enzyme called monoamine oxidase, but people who only have low levels of this enzyme cannot process it fast enough, so that it builds up in the body and can cause not only migraine attacks but also increases in blood pressure and symptoms such as nausea, sweating and anxiety. Other high tyramine foods which are sometimes implicated in migraine include chocolate, processed meats such as bacon and salami, smoked fish, raw onions, fermented or pickled vegetables, broad and fava beans, oranges and other citrus fruits, ripe bananas, pineapples and avocados. None of these disagree with me like cheese does, so I suspect that the combination of chemicals besides tyramine found in different items of food is involved in individual sensitivities. While some migraineurs benefit from a low tyramine diet, others have reported benefit from gluten-free, dairy-free or ketogenic diets, or from giving up all forms of sugar.

While some foods may be best avoided, the good news is that others – those containing high levels of omega-3 fatty acids – have been found to reduce the frequency and severity of attacks. They include oily oily fish, dark leafy greens, chia seeds, flaxseed, tofu, walnuts, and eggs. 

Alcoholic drinks are often blamed for precipitating migraine attacks. This may not be due so much to the alcohol itself, as to the fact that they contain various other chemicals, again including tyramine. I love wine, so am glad to say that white or rose in moderation is not a problem for me, in fact it is probably helpful because of its relaxing effect. Red wine is more risky, and is notorious for provoking headaches even in people without migraine, probably because of its quercetin content. I seldom drink more than one glass of anything nowadays, having found in the past that just a slight excess can be followed by a whole day of feeling very ill with a ghastly mixture of migraine and hangover symptoms. When cheese and wine parties were fashionable they often proved a disaster for me.

Coffee, and other caffeinated drinks, are migraine triggers for some people. I am fine with one double shot flat white or Americano mid-morning, but not more. Sudden withdrawal of caffeine can also lead to an attack, so it is best to keep a fairly constant intake. A few years ago I spent a week at a health resort where coffee was forbidden. I had cut down on it the week before but still had a nasty headache for the first three days, though this did not develop into a full-blown migraine. Paradoxically, caffeine is present in some over-the-counter medicines for migraine, and black coffee has been found helpful during attacks as a treatment for people who do not usually drink coffee at all.

The timing and size of meals is important, as well as the type of food and drink they contain. Going too long without food or water can precipitate a migraine attack, but so can eating too much at one time, so it is important to maintain a reasonably regular meal schedule and to avoid dehydration.

Food triggers may be hard to identify because there can be a delay of hours or even days before their effects develop. If someone gets a migraine soon after eating a certain type of food they may develop a fear of that item and avoid it in future, although the attack may actually have been caused by something else. There may be a psychological element involved – for example if I have given in to the temptation of eating a piece of cheese, I usually worry about it afterwards and my anxiety may increase the likelihood of an attack. 

Avoiding alcohol, caffeine and all suspected food triggers requires a lot of will power, is awkward in social situations, and makes for a somewhat joyless existence for those who enjoy eating and drinking. Some of the “migraine diets” to be found on the internet appear impossibly restrictive and might even cause nutritional deficiencies in the long term. Dietary triggers are not the same as allergies in which eating even a tiny amount of a certain food, peanuts for example, is quickly followed by a severe reaction or even death. Many migraineurs can get away with eating their trigger foods in small amounts now and then provided they are not exposed to other risk factors at the same time.