Migraine is one of the most common types of primary headache in clinical practice, and this disease can cause great distress and trouble to patients. Long-term migraine can seriously affect patients’ normal work, study and life, causing dullness, depression and even depression, and even some patients may have the idea of light-heartedness. In addition, migraine can be accompanied by other symptoms or diseases, for example, migraine is often accompanied by nausea, vomiting, fear of light, fear of noise and other symptoms, and some migraine can also be accompanied by cerebral infarction, cerebral hemorrhage and other serious diseases, causing a great threat to patients’ life and health. Therefore, migraines should be treated promptly and without carelessness. Many patients do not care about migraine, thinking that the pain will be fine after a while and no treatment is needed. If migraine is not treated in time, it may become more and more severe, with more intense pain and more frequent attacks. Therefore, the treatment of migraine should be given enough attention. So where to treat migraine? Many patients have the experience that migraine is recurring, and they change painkillers one after another, but at first it works a little, but the later the less effective it is. In fact, the choice of medication for mild migraines may provide some relief, but as the disease progresses and develops into intractable migraines, medication (whether common pain medication or specific medication) often becomes ineffective. So what should be done at this point? Microscopic nerve decompression for migraine in progress For intractable migraine, there is an effective solution – microvascular decompression – that has good results in treating migraine. Some medical practitioners believe that migraine is caused by the compression of nerves by blood vessels or tissues in the patient’s focal area (usually around the orbit, ear and temporal area, occipital area, etc.) and the release of pain-causing transmitters under certain conditions, which stimulates the nerves and triggers migraine attacks. Based on this cause, we treat migraine headaches by finding the vascular nerve compression point, stripping the blood vessels or other stuck tissues, releasing the compression, and protecting the nerve using the approach of microvascular decompression.