We often talk about what triggers a migraine, but rarely do we ask: how does a migraine end?

New imaging studies in 2025 and 2026 are shedding light on the Glymphatic System, as highlighted in our roundup of the latest migraine research, the brain's waste clearance pathway. The findings suggest that for many migraineurs, the issue isn't just the storm, it's the cleanup.

Taking Out the Trash

Every cell in your body produces metabolic waste. In the rest of the body, the lymphatic system scrubs this away. The brain, however, has its own specialized "dishwasher" known as the glymphatic system. It pumps Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF) through brain tissue, washing away waste proteins and inflammatory byproducts, primarily while you sleep.

The Blocked Drain Theory

Research indicates that during a migraine attack, the brain is flooded with inflammatory proteins (like CGRP and various cytokines). In a healthy brain, the glymphatic system flushes these out once the attack subsides.

However, in patients with prolonged attacks or status migrainosus, this system appears to be sluggish. Research into cellular senescence suggests that zombie cells in the trigeminal ganglion may compound this problem by continuously generating inflammatory waste. Lymphatic dysfunction in the meninges (the protective layers covering the brain) prevents the efficient "drainage" of these molecules.

The Consequence: Brain Fog and Hangover

This "buildup of trash" offers a biological explanation for the postdrome phase, the "migraine hangover." Those feelings of brain fog, fatigue, and cognitive slowing? That might literally be the leftover chemical debris from the pain storm that hasn't been washed away yet.

Optimizing Your Brain's Plumbing

How do we help the glymphatic system?

  • Deep Sleep: The system is most active during deep, slow-wave sleep. Prioritizing sleep hygiene is directly prioritizing brain clearance - which is why sleep deprivation is such a powerful migraine trigger.
  • Hydration: CSF production relies on adequate hydration.
  • Sleeping Position: Some studies suggest side-sleeping may be more efficient for glymphatic flow than sleeping on your back or stomach.

Understanding this system validates the "brain fog" that patients have reported for decades, it's not fatigue; it's a cleanup job in progress.

Tracking your sleep quality alongside migraine episodes can help you understand how your glymphatic system is performing. The the Migraine Trail app, available free that lets you log attacks, monitor postdrome symptoms, and track migraine triggers including sleep disruption.