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

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<strong>Fluids</strong> <strong>Hypertension</strong> <strong>Syndromes</strong> – Dr. Leonardo Izecksohn – page 198<br />

than 10 years, before the damage occurrence on the seventh cranial nerve.<br />

Sjögren syndrome: “Patients with Sjögren Syndrome showed larger ventricular volume than control<br />

subjects with migraine. The severity of Magnetic resonance imaging signal hyperintensities and<br />

ventricular volume were related to several cognitive and psychiatric variables.” (Mataró M, and<br />

others).<br />

“Over a period of 10 years, a 49-year-old man had 3 episodes of recurrent cranial nerve palsy regressing<br />

within a few weeks. Each episode was accompanied with acute inaugural headache and diplopia<br />

and once with sensory impairment of the trigeminal nerve and once with tinnitus. The diagnosis of<br />

Goujerot-Sjögren's syndrome was retained ...” (Bakouche P, and others).<br />

“Women with Sjögren's syndrome... showed greater intake of ... caffeine in 1 degrees Sjögren's syndrome,<br />

as well as ...in 2 degrees Sjögren's syndrome/Systemic lupus erythematosus, and... in 2 degrees<br />

Sjögren's syndrome/Rheumatoid arthritis.” (Cermak J M, and others).<br />

All these above sicknesses probably were consequent to the simultaneous Cerebrospinal Fluid's <strong>Hypertension</strong><br />

stretching the brain and all the nerves in the skull, added by the caffeine intoxicating the entire<br />

body.<br />

XIII- i - Cerebrospinal Fluid <strong>Hypertension</strong> squeezing the 8 th cranial nerve: The Cerebrospinal Fluid<br />

<strong>Hypertension</strong> can squeeze the Vestibular and Cochlear Nerves, which together are the Acoustic<br />

Nerve, which causes earaches, nausea, retching, vomit, dizziness - vertigo, buzzing and deafness.<br />

Red ear syndrome and erythromelalgia are reflexive external ears manifestations of the 8 th cranial<br />

nerve sufferings. Sometimes the squeezed Cochlear Nerve changes the physiologic sounds into pathological<br />

sonorous sense, worsening the migraines by the sonorous stimulus. This is the allodynia of the<br />

cochlear nerve: the sonic phobia or phonophobia.<br />

The labyrinthine disturbance can cause a sudden fall of the patient, without loss of conscience or<br />

any other complaint. All the medical exams show a healthy patient. We had patients with this unexplained<br />

sudden fall, caused by daily chocolate added with coffee 100 milliliters, and more psychological<br />

stress, which means self-made excessive adrenaline (Epinephrine) and corticosteroids.<br />

The Vestibular disturbance can cause the Vasovagal response or syndrome. It can be improved by<br />

withdrawing the caffeine from the patient´s diet.<br />

Eventually, the Cerebrospinal Fluid <strong>Hypertension</strong> causes definitive 8 th . Cranial nerve damage, as<br />

Ménière’s disease, Sensorineural Hearing Loss (deafness) and Labyrinthitis. This is one of the five<br />

possible pathophysiologies of the denominated Basilar Migraine.<br />

The other four possible Basilar migraines pathophysiologies are:<br />

1- The vasoconstriction (vasospasm) of the Basilar artery, causing ischemia and dysfunction of this<br />

Central Nervous System area. This can be caused by caffeine or other vasoconstrictors.<br />

2- Damage in the Inner Ear, the Labyrinth, which can be caused as by the Inner Ears’ fluids<br />

(Perilymph and Endolymph) <strong>Hypertension</strong>, as by other etiologies.<br />

3- Congenital hypoplasia of the Basilar artery, added with some vasoconstrictor action, as caffeine.<br />

4- Acquired obstruction of the Basilar artery. This causes a permanent neurological lesion.<br />

“Thirty-five patients with Migrainous vertigo had comprehensive neurotological tests between attacks.<br />

Three patients showed saccadic pursuit (8.6%), in one of whom saccadic hypometria was also<br />

present. Caloric test results revealed unilateral caloric hypofunction in seven patients (20%). Static posturography<br />

results revealed increased sway velocity when the eyes were closed or the platform was distorted.<br />

These findings during the symptom-free period revealed that peripheral vestibular dysfunction<br />

was more common than a central deficit.” (Celebisoy N, and others).<br />

“Basilar Migraine, also known as Bickerstaff syndrome, consists of headache accompanied by dizziness,<br />

ataxia, tinnitus, decreased hearing, nausea and vomiting, dysarthria, diplopia, loss of balance, bilateral<br />

paresthesias or paresis, altered consciousness, syncope, and sometimes loss of consciousness.<br />

Basilar Migraine is observed most frequently in adolescent girls and young women.”(Dafer R M).<br />

“Basilar-type Migraine occurred in 10% of patients with Migraine with typical aura.” “Basilar-type<br />

aura seemingly may occur at times in any patient with Migraine with typical aura.”(Kirchmann M, and<br />

others).

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