Scientific studies have proven that migraine attacks are closely related to the alignment of the vascular nerves in the scalp and changes in the body’s endocrine levels. This makes it understandable why there are far more female migraine sufferers than male sufferers, because the endocrine changes are relatively more frequent in women. So how can migraines in women be treated effectively? Many migraine sufferers may have tried various treatments in many places, but the results are often unsatisfactory, at best relieving the pain at the time, and the attacks still recur afterwards. This kind of severe and intractable migraine should not be relieved by medication for a long time, for one thing, medication is no longer useful, and for another, long-term medication is also harmful to the body. Surgical treatment should be considered for this type of migraine in order to remove the lesion and achieve the treatment. This brings us to the new breakthroughs in the field of surgery in the treatment of intractable migraine. Neurosurgery currently performs microvascular decompression, which can directly remove the root cause of the pain, namely the compression of the vascular nerves on the scalp, through vascular nerve decompression, to treat migraine with good results.