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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 220<br />

We verified that almost all <strong>Fluids</strong> <strong>Hypertension</strong> <strong>Syndromes</strong> sicknesses, signs and symptoms<br />

present few or no inflammation. Few of them present ocular hyperemia (erythema). All the edemas<br />

are cold. There are no purulent secretions. There is no fever.<br />

“Sometimes the parents and even the medical doctors ignore or simply disrespect the symptoms that<br />

accompany the headache crisis. This predispose, as shown in this work, to diagnostic errors that culminate<br />

in unspecific therapies, relying on the symptoms and not specifically to the etiology, inducing<br />

to the indiscriminate and chronic consumption of analgesics, which besides of incorrect, expose to the<br />

harmful risks of their collateral effects.”(Translated from Portuguese). (Fragoso Y D, and others).<br />

XIV-3) The diagnose of advanced Benign Intracranial <strong>Hypertension</strong> (Pseudotumor cerebri), with<br />

edema of both Optic Nerves bigger than 1 Diopter, and with headaches that do not reduce with our<br />

treatment, which is very rare, and the Inner ear damage, demands radiological, magnetic resonance image,<br />

or other exams to differentiate them from tumors and other sicknesses. The intracranial tumors occurred<br />

in less than once out of 1,000 of our patients with Optic Nerve’s disk borders edemas caused by<br />

the Cerebrospinal Fluid <strong>Hypertension</strong>.<br />

XIV-4) It is useless the differentiation from the Migraine of intraocular pressure rise and the <strong>Normal</strong><br />

(Peak) Tension Glaucoma, because both illnesses interlace with each other and the treatment to both is<br />

the same. They are the same sickness at two phases, years apart one from the other.<br />

We do not wait the Glaucoma establishes its damage in the patient’s eyes to medicate him, because<br />

the damage is irreversible and the patient is suffering now. We medicate now his sufferings, with or<br />

without glaucoma. Consequently, the ophthalmological exams to determine precisely whether the patient<br />

already has, or still has not Glaucoma, are irrelevant. Whether the doctor uses these exams to determine<br />

if the patient must or must not be medicated, he is doing a medical error, which unhappily is<br />

very common now-a-days.<br />

The same impossibility to differentiate hedges occurs between the Cerebrospinal Fluid <strong>Hypertension</strong><br />

Syndrome and the Pseudotumor Cerebri (Benign Intracranial <strong>Hypertension</strong>). They are the same sickness<br />

with different intensities. The differentiation between both diagnoses is useless.<br />

XIV-5) <strong>Migraines</strong> and headaches secondary and symptomatic of other diseases - Complicated Migraine<br />

or migrainous infarction.<br />

Primary migraines are those above described, so denominated because they are the first symptoms,<br />

but they indeed are secondary to the <strong>Fluids</strong> <strong>Hypertension</strong> <strong>Syndromes</strong> and their etiologies. All migraines<br />

are secondary to something that is wrong in the individual health. Otherwise, the patient would not feel<br />

any migraine. There are no primary migraines or headaches without etiologies or risk factors.<br />

Secondary headaches and migraines are symptomatic of many diseases with other etiologies, which<br />

have nothing with the <strong>Fluids</strong> <strong>Hypertension</strong> <strong>Syndromes</strong>, but they rarely occurred between our patients.<br />

They are:<br />

Arterial hypertension.<br />

Cerebral infarction. (Ischemic stroke) (Hemiplegic Migraine). It can be consequent at least to two<br />

distinct conditions:<br />

a - The Arterial <strong>Hypertension</strong>.<br />

b - A peak of the Cerebrospinal Fluid <strong>Hypertension</strong> associated with an Arterial Hypotension.<br />

Chronic hydrocephalus.<br />

Infectious rhinitis, sinusitis, Otitis, meningitis, other facial, intracranial and extracranial infections.<br />

Intoxication other than caffeine.<br />

Neuritis and other neural sicknesses.<br />

Post-brain-concussion syndrome. Head and neck trauma. Dural sinus thrombosis.<br />

Psychiatric disorders, with and without caffeine.<br />

Sub-arachnoid or aneurysm hemorrhage.<br />

Tumor or other intracranial expansive diseases.

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