Abstract
A short description of where I was, and where I am now. 10 years ago I was unable to use smartphones, modern computer monitors, new TVs, graphics cards, LED light bulbs without experience headaches or migraines that would persist for days. Now I am able to use all of these devices with a short adjustment period of several hours to weeks at the very worst. The symptoms I experience during the adjustment period are manageable with basic pain killers, and often by simply taking regular screen breaks. After adjustment I am able to use the devices without issues unless there is some major change to the device or my environment where re-adjustment time might be needed. There is still room for improvement, which I expect to continue, however my issues with screens are now minor compared with where I was originally.
Background
A more general background to my medical history and experience with screens. Some types of display would consistently trigger migraines, typically IPS screens. Graphics cards and software would cause more conventional headaches, and OLED screens caused a painful pinching sensation in my eyes as well as conventional headaches and mild migraines.
I also experienced severe gastrointestinal issues, fevers occurring predominately at night, muscle pain/inflammation serious enough to affect my kidney function after exercise, and an anxiety disorder.
All of the above has improved from being an serious issue, to either disappearing to becoming manageable with minor interventions.
What I did and experienced
Around 6 years ago I noticed the muscle pains I experienced had become much less frequent and less severe. I noted that for the past two years I had shifted my diet from being very high in red meat (800gram daily) to largely vegetarian but still eating diary daily and occasional red meat consumption. I did some searching and found that red meat / diary contains an inflammatory molecule (Neu5Gc) linked to various diseases. With this knowledge, I cut out all diary and red meat from my diet.
Within a few days my night fevers had entirely stopped, and my gastrointestinal symptoms had improved, confirming what I had read. What was entirely unexpected was the effect this dietary change appeared to have on my screen issues.
Below is a brief timeline of how my symptoms changed year by year:
· Years 1
o Much worse migraine pain
o Gastro, muscle pain, mental health improvement
· Year 2
o Lighter migraines compared to prior year
o Able to adapt to devices which caused minor issues
o Gastro, muscle pain, mental health improvement
· Years 3 - 4
o Migraines continue to become less painful
o Recovery time reduces
o Able to adapt to devices which caused minor issues much faster
o Able to adapt to devices which caused moderate symptoms
o Gastro, muscle pain, mental health improvement
· Years 5 – 6
o Migraines continue to become less painful, generally ‘silent’ ie without actual pain but other migraine symptoms
o Recovery time reduces, in many cases trivial ~30mins to an hour
o Able to adapt to devices which caused major symptoms
o Gastro, muscle pain, mental health improvement
Science
Here I will outline the scientific framework which explains my experience above. There is a quick summary below showing each key link in the framework, with more detailed explanations with links to scientific papers underneath.
eat read meat / diary ->
digested into small cell fragments ->
those red meat cell fragments used as spare parts in our human cells creating hybrid cells (NEU-5GC) ->
hybrid cells are attacked by immune system ->
immune system lowers level of serotonin as part of immune response (among other things) ->
low serotonin results in weak serotogenic neuron network in brain ->
impairs ability for brain to regulate activity ->
causes migraines/pain in response to flickering / unstable / blurry images
Neu5Gc
Neu5Gc is a cell component found in most mammals, but only in small amounts in humans. Human cells use a similar cell component Neu5Ga, however Neu5Gc from food is similar enough that it can be integrated into human cells. Unfortunately, because the Neu5Gc is not human in origin, any cells which contain it may be attacked by the immune system creating inflammation and other effects.
Sources for general overview of Neu5Gc
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N-Glycolylneuraminic_acid
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/10/161019160201.htm
Sources detailing human cell uptake of Neu5Gc
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC218710/
sources showing Neu5Gc causes inflammation / increases cancer risk
https://bmcmedicine.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12916-020-01721-8
autoimmunity
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4070528/
Response to chronic infection
The above shows that Neu5Gc can trigger an immune response. This means the immune has mistaken the human-Neu5Gc cells as an infection. When an infection occurs, one of the secondary response after the immune system attacks is to reduce the availability of vitamins/minerals/nutrition which could fuel an infection. Part of this response is to reduce the amount of amino acids in our body, one such amino acid is l-tryptophan. This is important because this amino acid is used to create serotonin in our bodies and brain.
Source showing chronic infection lowers serotonin
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4527356/
serotonin
This will focus on the role serotonin plays in migraine as it is well researched and documented. I am assume many of these conclusions also apply to conventional headaches, but the link is less clear. Study of the role of serotonin is complex, with many contradictory findings. Some studies show that people who experience migraines have low serotonin:
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4117050/
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3452194/
Other studies show higher serotonin levels in migraineurs.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213158218300160
However the brains responses to serotonin generally not working correctly in migraineurs is a common theme in research.
https://thejournalofheadacheandpain.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s10194-016-0711-0
Specific aspects of serotonin function have been found to cause migraine pain, where higher levels of specific receptor activity cause greater pain. I believe this is why my migraine pain initially increased. I had higher levels of serotonin activating receptors, but as is explained below, had not yet developed the beneficial aspects of higher serotonin levels which prevent migraines.
https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/7CFAE08C4FA8EFC3901A0848C2545336/S0317167100000123a.pdf/the-biology-of-serotonin-receptors-focus-on-migraine-pathophysiology-and-treatment.pdf
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/2045831/
These papers describe how serotonin neuron/receptor networks control/regulate brain activity
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41593-022-01213-3#:~:text=Serotonin%20regulates%20behavior%20by%20modulating,aggression%2C%20anxiety%20and%20depression3.
https://www.nature.com/articles/1395346
With these papers going further into how serotonin receptors control brain wave frequency. Think of this as similar to the clock speed of a CPU. Higher clock speeds speed up thinking and processing, but come at a cost of higher energy consumption. Like a CPU, we don’t want our brains to be running at a high frequency unless it is necessary because of harmful effects.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3282112/
https://www.jneurosci.org/content/30/6/2211
These papers theorise that migraines are a protective response against the brain working too hard and damaging itself due to build up of toxic metabolic byproducts. This is analogous to how we experience muscle pain due to build of lactic acid after exercise.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0306987716305035
https://orbi.uliege.be/bitstream/2268/247255/1/Gross%20et%20al%20Metabolic%20f
How does this link to screens? Flickering light induces a change in brain frequency / metabolic rate in response to the frequency itself. This can cause harmful effects.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11355381/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flicker_vertigo
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8710722/
In migraineurs this effect is stronger. This means that people who experience migraines are more sensitive to the effects of screen flicker.
https://jov.arvojournals.org/article.aspx?articleid=2770320
To summarise so far:
Insufficient serotonin receptors prevent control of brain activity in response to flickering light sources,
This triggers a migraine to protect the brain,
If a migraine is not triggered, brain disfunction could lead to a regular headache or other neurological symptoms.
This paper below is quite important. It shows in mice how low levels of serotonin (the neurotransmitter) results in lower levels of serotonin receptors and neurons (the bits of the brain that respond to the neurotransmitter). It also shows that these mice can recover when normal levels of serotonin return.
https://www.eneuro.org/content/4/2/ENEURO.0376-16.2017
Summary
A chronic immune system response to red meat/diary lowered my serotonin levels, increasing sensitivity to flickering light, resulting in migraines and other symptoms. I experienced a very slow improvement, this slow response to dietary changes seems to be caused by two factors:
It takes a long time for some cells affected by neu5gc to be replaced, some types of cells can survive for decades.
The brain takes time to grow new cells
This results in slow improvement as cells turn over and my brain develops new neural pathways which respond to serotonin. The Initial worsening of my migraines was caused by higher serotonin in absence of stronger serotonin neuron networks which take longer to develop.
How does this relate to other forum members experiences? Many forum members including myself found some relief from eye patching. I hypothesize that that eye patching reduces brain’s visual processing workload by correcting a visual defect, this lowers metabolic rate / activity, making screens less likely to trigger migraine or produce other symptoms of the brain working too hard.
Please do not read this as a fundamental explanation of our symptoms. We are complex machines and there may be other pathways which lead to our symptoms. I am expecting there to be some long term vegan forum members to whom this explanation cannot be correct. It may not even be the reason my symptoms improved, but it is the best explanation I have found.
Kind Regards,
Rob
(A picture of me receiving my doctorate in statistics & engineering)