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Migraine can increase the risk of cardiovascular diseases

Migraine can increase the risk of cardiovascular diseases

Migraine is not just a headache. Migraine is a neurological, genetic and chronic disease. Although headache is the main symptom of migraine, other symptoms are very common and can also be important, such as sensitivity to light, smells and noise, nausea, vomiting, visual symptoms and tingling and numbness in the body (migraine auras). dizziness, sensitivity to movement or going bad on car, bus, boat trips. Did you know that there are people who have migraine auras and never have headaches? That these other symptoms can happen in isolation and that many people have them to a lesser extent on a daily basis, even outside the crisis of headache? These symptoms are all generated in the brain, in different areas of it, which are more sensitive who has migraines. This increased vulnerability of the brain, especially if exposed to the already known triggers or triggers of migraine, occurs due to dysfunctions in several neurotransmitters such as serotonin, dopamine, noradrenaline and glutamate. These substances have a different functioning in who has migraine.

At last, we already know that migraine is a disease of the whole brain, in which the genetic tendency and the environment (triggers) interact all the time, and so others start

Recent research has shown that people with migraine have a higher risk of stroke and cardiovascular disease, especially those who have a migraine with aura

The brain is the control machine of our body. It commands all of our conscious vital functions, such as sleep, hunger, mood and thoughts, and also controls those we do not notice, such as breath control, heart rate, blood pressure, and many others. People with migraine often believe they have multiple illnesses as they exhibit a variety of symptoms that may occur due to migraine's brain chemical dysfunction.

Recognized comorbidities of migraine:

Psychological / psychiatric disorders: depression, anxiety, panic syndrome, mood disorders, disorder (9)>

  • Sleep disorders: Insomnia, unrepairable sleep, daytime sleepiness, bruxism, nocturnal enuresis (bed wetting), sleepwalking
  • Cognitive deficits: difficulties and concentration and memory.
  • Dizziness of various types: the vast majority of healthy people under 60 who have dizziness / dizziness in recurrent seizures, or even dizziness, do not have labyrinthitis.
  • Gastrointestinal disorders: irritable bowel syndrome, chronic obstructive bowel disease, frequent diarrhea, recurrent abdominal pain.
  • Other pain: Neck pain, low back pain, muscle aches, tendinitis, fibromyalgia.
  • It is now also recognized that migraine may be a risk factor for other diseases. Several recent research has proven that people with migraine have a higher risk of stroke and cardiovascular disease, especially those who have migraine with aura, and that risk is increased if associated with smoking and use of some hormonal contraceptives in women. Migraine appears as a major risk factor for high blood pressure, diabetes and obesity. A new study published in a leading American medical journal has found that migraine can permanently alter the brain in the long run. It was found, in brain scans of the evaluated patients, a higher frequency of brain lesions, small strokes and atrophy in some brain areas, that is, loss of neurons. And he concludes that migraine is not a benign disease, as he imagined.

Migraine is not a simple headache. Treating migraine is to take care of your brain, and consequently your health as a whole.


Periodontal disease and acute coronary syndrome

Periodontal disease and acute coronary syndrome

Researchers from Sweden, Switzerland and the United States evaluated 161 subjects diagnosed with ACS and a control group of 161 subjects who did not have ACS. They studied the serum white blood cell count of these subjects, high and low density lipoprotein levels, high sensitivity C-reactive protein levels and clinical periodontal health.

(Health)

Baby born with heart out of body survives after surgeries

Baby born with heart out of body survives after surgeries

A baby born with a heart out of the body survived the repositioning surgery of the organ. Vanellope Hope Wilkins, who has no sternum, a bone that integrates the structure of the thorax, was born on November 22nd in a cesarean section. In all, there were three operations to put your heart back in the chest, according to the BBC.

(Health)