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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 212<br />

We conclude that the Cerebrospinal Fluid <strong>Hypertension</strong> Syndrome is the etiology of more than<br />

200 migraines, variants, signs, symptoms and sicknesses, above listed on the Summary. These<br />

sicknesses, besides others, are caused or worsened by the Cerebrospinal Fluid <strong>Hypertension</strong>. Meanwhile,<br />

many of them are also related with the chronic caffeine intoxication, and sometimes we could<br />

not differentiate which of these two etiologies was more important to the patient.<br />

We conclude that the Fluid <strong>Hypertension</strong> Syndrome sicknesses, signs and symptoms, can affect<br />

all people’s phenotypes, gender, races and ages, depending from the amounts and kinds of daily<br />

drinks, related with their bodies' weights and personal susceptibilities. There are some racial, familiar<br />

and aging predispositions, but any person who drinks excessively can suffer from the <strong>Fluids</strong><br />

<strong>Hypertension</strong> <strong>Syndromes</strong> or the caffeine intoxication.<br />

Although we did not make racial statistics, after examining thousands of patients with the fluids hypertension<br />

syndromes, the most resistant group seems to be the adults white men, before they become<br />

old. Meanwhile, when they get old, after the 40-year-old and mainly after the 60-year-old, this<br />

resistance vanishes.<br />

XIII- o - Usually the three <strong>Fluids</strong> <strong>Hypertension</strong> <strong>Syndromes</strong> happen mixed on the same days, but<br />

not at the same hours.<br />

We found Migraine’s patients who presented simultaneously Glaucoma in one eye and Optic Nerve’s<br />

borders edema in the other eye. This occurred because the Cerebrospinal Fluid pressure raised and<br />

caused Optic Nerve's border edema in one eye, but the intraocular pressure of the other eye raised more<br />

and caused glaucomatous damage (glaucomatous Optic neuropathy).<br />

We also found patients whose one or both eyes have simultaneously glaucomatous damage (cup/disk<br />

of 0.6 or 0.7 and deepness of 3 or 4 diopters or visibility of the lamina cribosa pores), and the small remaining<br />

border of the same Optic Nerve presents edema of 0.5 diopter. This was only possible because<br />

there was a timing difference between the fluids pressures’ rise, from the intraocular Aqueous<br />

Humor pressure and the Cerebrospinal Fluid pressure (Scheme IX-2 - repeated). These both fluids’<br />

pressures rise in the same day, but at different hours. At the hour each fluid pressure rises, it causes its<br />

specific Optic Nerve’s damage.<br />

Scheme IX-2 (repeated): Simultaneous Edema of the Optic Nerve’s borders caused by the<br />

raised Cerebrospinal Fluid pressure, and visibility of the Lamina Cribosa pores caused by the<br />

raised intraocular pressure. This is only possible in the same eye with timing difference between one<br />

and the other pressures rises.<br />

Consequently, these patients present the <strong>Migraines</strong> of both <strong>Fluids</strong> <strong>Hypertension</strong> <strong>Syndromes</strong>, at different<br />

hours.

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