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Fluids Hypertension Syndromes: Migraines, Headaches, Normal ...

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any results.<br />

<strong>Fluids</strong> <strong>Hypertension</strong> <strong>Syndromes</strong> – Dr. Leonardo Izecksohn – page 188<br />

Bullous serofibrinous exudative retinal detachment: The absolute excess of hydration and corticosteroids<br />

to a hospitalized patient, can cause it: ''Systemic corticosteroid treatment may cause<br />

severe exacerbation of retinal detachment and lasting visual loss in some patients with idiopathic<br />

central serous retinopathy.'' (Gass J D, and Little H).<br />

This same lesion can be caused by the excessive water retention in the patients with renal failure:<br />

''Two patients receiving hemodialysis for chronic renal failure developed bilateral bullous retinal detachment<br />

associated with multiple underlying serous detachments of the pigment epithelium. Many of<br />

the detachments of the pigment epithelium were surrounded by subretinal whitish exudate that was<br />

probably fibrinous in type.'' (Gass J D).<br />

XIII - d - 8) Cerebrospinal Fluid <strong>Hypertension</strong> squeezing the 2 nd cranial nerve - 8 - Chronic<br />

Squeezing the Central Retinal Vein in the Optic Nerve, causing intraocular pressure chronic rise<br />

and glaucoma.<br />

We observed that the <strong>Migraines</strong> were related with a small chronic rise of the intraocular pressure,<br />

from 17 until 21 mmHg, and this was the origin of our Graph V-1: Intensities of <strong>Migraines</strong>, <strong>Headaches</strong><br />

and Migraine variants linked with their Intraocular Pressures, published on the year 2002:<br />

Graph V-1 (schematic) (repeated): Intensities of <strong>Migraines</strong>, <strong>Headaches</strong> and Migraine variants<br />

(vertical from 0 to 4) linked with their Intraocular Pressures (horizontal from 14 to 26 mmHg). Modified.<br />

(Izecksohn L and Izecksohn C).<br />

The migraines that originated this Graph V-1 were from three origins:<br />

a) The solitary rise of the intraocular pressure (Ocular <strong>Hypertension</strong> Syndrome). After years of these<br />

migraines from the raised intraocular pressure alone, they can become a glaucoma.<br />

b) The solitary rise of the Cerebrospinal fluid pressure. This causes many migraines and variants because<br />

it stretches all the cranial nerves, it causes the Optic Nerve's borders edema, but no glaucoma.<br />

After many decades of migraines, reducing its etiologies, it can cure without any lesion.<br />

c) The Cerebrospinal fluid pressure raises and the intraocular pressure also raises, because two pathophysiologies:

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