The caffeine withdrawal from our regular drinking of black tea was brutal, headaches for three of four days.
Caffeine withdrawal from chronic use causes consistent effects typical of physical dependence, including headaches, mood changes and the possibility of reduced cerebral blood flow.
Not exact matches
Headaches can spur
from caffeine withdrawal,
caffeine overdose, and
caffeine sensitivity — making coffee an obvious culprit.
You may experience headaches
from the
caffeine withdrawals at first, but overtime these
withdrawals should disappear.
So I try to stay away
from caffeine as my negative body reaction
from withdrawal.
And people seem to vary
from one person to another in terms of their ability to metabolize the drug, as well as their individual responses to
caffeine withdrawal.
The transition was really hard - the headaches, the brain fog, the lethargy, and the nausea felt almost unbearable (I've since learned that Herxing
from Lyme treatment is WAY worse than
caffeine withdrawal).
Chronic
caffeine consumers, because of the developed tolerance, may have no net benefits
from caffeine, and that increased alertness and performance they experience are in fact a reversal of
withdrawal symptoms («
withdrawal relief»)[65,66,128,129].
And about fatigue and headache, this happens if you are going through
withdrawal from caffeine, or alcohol.
First, eliminating food allergies and un-junking the diet causes reactions similar to
withdrawal from other addictive substances like
caffeine, alcohol, nicotine, cocaine or heroin.
Sudden
withdrawal from caffeine or sugar can have this effect, as can dehydration.
Between
withdrawal from sugar, booze and
caffeine, a detox can be a shock to the central nervous system.
Now that I have gone through
caffeine withdrawal, I do my best to stay away
from anything considered addictive.
I also had a cracking headache
from temporary
caffeine withdrawal or dehydration or stress or something.