Fluids Hypertension Syndromes: Migraines, Headaches, Normal ...
Fluids Hypertension Syndromes: Migraines, Headaches, Normal ...
Fluids Hypertension Syndromes: Migraines, Headaches, Normal ...
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<strong>Fluids</strong> <strong>Hypertension</strong> <strong>Syndromes</strong> – Dr. Leonardo Izecksohn – page 136<br />
c- Most damage is slowly progressive, and only become or is perceived as sicknesses after many<br />
years of progression. There are many small glaucomatous damage (glaucomatous Optic neuropathy)<br />
that still have not the size to be denominated as Glaucoma. After more some years, whether the damage<br />
increases, then it will be classified as Glaucoma. However, the sickness has begun many years<br />
before the classification.<br />
Under the effect of a strong etiology, anyone patient can present the respective sickness suddenly, at<br />
any age.<br />
Typical is the age evolution of the signs and symptoms from the beer intolerance:<br />
- On teenagers and at the twenties, the main manifestation of beer drinks is hangover.<br />
- After some more years, beer drinks cause red eyes and headaches.<br />
- After the fifties, the main manifestations are tearfulness, neck pain, cluster and tension migraines.<br />
- After more some years of beer drinks, the result is the glaucoma.<br />
Aging is an etiology that we cannot control, and it is associated with every other etiology. The signs<br />
and symptoms of the <strong>Fluids</strong> <strong>Hypertension</strong> <strong>Syndromes</strong> that happen mainly in aged people are denominated<br />
by some doctors as “late-life migrainous accompaniments”.<br />
We surely would like it, but it is still impossible to say to the patient “You turn yourself younger 20<br />
years from now”. I want to be younger again, too.<br />
We conclude that aging is an etiology to the <strong>Fluids</strong> <strong>Hypertension</strong> <strong>Syndromes</strong> and to the caffeine<br />
intolerance, which reduces the signs and symptoms and increases the definitive damage and sicknesses.<br />
XI- 32) – Very low arterial pressure when sleeping or in surgeries:<br />
When the patient is sleeping, whether the blood arterial pressure falls too much, and the perfusion<br />
pressure becomes lower than the intraocular pressure, it can cause an ischemic “low-tension” glaucomatous<br />
damage. This is one etiology to glaucoma, and not to the fluid's hypertension.<br />
“Patients who had visual field loss progression showed significantly lower nocturnal blood pressure<br />
variables, with the dips of the systolic, diastolic, and mean arterial pressure significantly larger. They<br />
also had a greater history of disk hemorrhages. The nocturnal reduction in blood pressure may, therefore,<br />
be an additional risk factor in glaucoma patients”. (Graham S L, and Drance S M).<br />
Similar ischemic damage can happen in the brain, whether the blood perfusion pressure falls too<br />
much, to values lesser than the Cerebrospinal fluid pressure.<br />
XI- 33) – Vasoconstrictors, vasodilators, and others: The following etiologies, besides others, can<br />
cause cranial vasodilation, or initial vasoconstriction followed by a rebound vasodilation, and consequent<br />
migraines and headaches:<br />
1) Adrenaline (Epinephrine); it is the main stress hormone: it is a vasoconstrictor.<br />
2) Alcoholic (ethanol) drink: it is a vasodilator, and in high doses it causes arterial diastolic hypertension.<br />
3) Analgesics: Most of them have caffeine, which is a vasoconstrictor, in the tablet. The caffeine withdrawal<br />
causes brain vasodilation.<br />
4) Amphetamines: they are vasoconstrictors.<br />
5) Caffeine: it is a brain vasoconstrictor.<br />
6) Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) causes dilatation of the cranial middle meningeal artery.<br />
7) Carbachol: it is a cholinomimetic agonist, a cranial vasodilator.<br />
8) Cardiac patent foramen ovale and pulmonary arterio-venous malformation: they cause vasodilation.<br />
Their surgical closure can cause vasoconstriction and migraines after the surgery.<br />
9) Cocaine: It is a strong vasoconstrictor. It causes much more lesions than the caffeine.<br />
10) Cortisone (a stress hormone): it retains water and raises the fluids’ pressures.<br />
11) Diving: it can cause breath with few oxygen and excessive carbonic gas; both are brain vasodilators.<br />
12) Ergots: They are vasoconstrictors.<br />
13) Fasting: It decreases the blood glucose and the arterial pressure, which cause vasodilation.