



According to researchers from the American Academy of Neurology, global warming is fueling a rise in neurological diseases ranging from migraines to Alzheimer’s. People with Parkinson’s and multiple sclerosis (MS) may also experience worsening symptoms. …
According to the Environmental Protection Agency, rising global average temperature continue to impact widespread changes in weather patterns, and extreme weather events—such as heat waves and hurricanes—are likely to become more frequent or more intense. Experts suggest that the stress of these events can trigger headaches.
The World Health Organization has referred to climate change as “the single biggest health threat facing humanity.”
By: Admin – Climate DepotMay 25, 2023 5:50 PM
https://www.pennmedicine.org/news/news-blog/2023/may/headache-and-climate-change
Why Climate Change Might Be Affecting Your Headaches
by Kelsey Geesler


Recurring headaches are one of the most common nervous system disorders, with an estimated 45 million, or one in six, Americans complaining of headaches each year. People who experience headaches or migraines regularly are probably familiar with different triggers for their headaches—such as consuming alcohol, increased stress, or changes in sleep quality. But what people suffering from headaches might not realize is that climate change can have effects on headaches.
How Can Climate Change Cause Headaches?
According to the Environmental Protection Agency, rising global average temperature continue to impact widespread changes in weather patterns, and extreme weather events—such as heat waves and hurricanes—are likely to become more frequent or more intense. Experts suggest that the stress of these events can trigger headaches.
“Not only can experiencing an extreme storm itself be stressful, but the aftermath, where we have to deal with injuries, destruction to our homes or other property, and the loss of our possessions can add to that stress said Marilyn Howarth, MD, an adjunct associate professor of Pharmacology at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine and director of the Community Outreach and Engagement Core with the Center of Excellence in Environmental Toxicology (CEET). “This stress can cause people who are already susceptible to headaches to experience them more frequently or more acutely.”
With the increase of weather events that cause flooding, like hurricanes and other intense downpours, there is also an increased likelihood that storage facilities for chemicals and other hazardous materials may be disturbed, which could cause spills and leaks that can contaminate the soil, water, and air.
“A number of common chemicals, like solvents, are known to cause irritation in the nose and throat, and headaches, and if a high enough concentration of these chemicals makes it into the soil around our homes, or into our drinking water, exposure can cause headaches in some individuals,” Howarth noted. “Individuals may also come into contact with contaminated water while attempting to access their homes or evacuate the affected area, which could trigger headaches.”
Research also suggests that rising temperatures associated with climate change have an impact on changing foliage and pollen in some areas.
“These changes can lead to an increase in pollen that already exists in an area, or the introduction of a new kind of pollen in an area that has never seen it before,” Howarth elaborated. “People with existing allergies may see them get worse, and people who never experienced allergies in the past might develop them.”
A recent study from Holly Elser, MD, PhD, a Neurology resident at Penn Medicine, illustrates an increase in emergency department visits for patients diagnosed with headaches following wildfires in California. “Wildfires are most common in the Western U.S., with climate change driving the intensification and length of wildfire seasons. But even Mid-Atlantic states like Pennsylvania and New Jersey are subject to the effects of wildfires,” Elser said, noting a “red flag” warning in the Philadelphia region, just last month, resulting from warm temperatures, combined with very low humidity and strong winds, caused an increased risk of fire danger.
…
Children may be particularly susceptible to climate change impacts such as increased air pollution exacerbating asthma and flooding redistributing chemicals and causing mold growth which can also exacerbate asthma.
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Global warming can cause headaches

Headaches are not lethal every time, but their recurring episodes can cause huge discomfort and hinder our daily activities and productivity. Other than common factors like alcohol, stress, and poor sleep, now global warming has also become a major factor that can trigger headaches, found the University of Pennsylvania.
In its latest research, scientists found that the aftermath of storms, mainly led by climate change, can lead to stress and headaches. The aftermath of such storms includes the destruction of homes, property, loss of possessions, health issues, etc. Contamination of soil, water, and air, can also lead to an increase in cases of nose and throat irritation resulting in headaches.
Experts suggest that a spike in average temperature due to climate change can impact the changing foliage and pollen in some areas. Which can increase allergy symptoms among individuals.
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Study Finds: Headaches and other neurological diseases are getting worse — due to climate change

Headaches are getting worse, and a new study says climate change may be to blame.
According to researchers from the American Academy of Neurology, global warming is fueling a rise in neurological diseases ranging from migraines to Alzheimer’s. People with Parkinson’s and multiple sclerosis (MS) may also experience worsening symptoms.
Strokes may also become more prevalent as the planet heats up. The team notes that global warming causes air pollution, which previous studies have linked to worsening brain health. Smog from traffic and industry contains tiny toxic particles called particulate matter. They enter the bloodstream after people breathe them into their lungs. eventually, they can travel to the brain.
“Although the international community seeks to reduce global temperature rise to under 2.7 ºF before 2100, irreversible environmental changes have already occurred, and as the planet warms these changes will continue to occur,” says the Cleveland Clinic’s Andrew Dhawan, MD, DPhil, in a media release. “As we witness the effects of a warming planet on human health, it is imperative that neurologists anticipate how neurologic disease may change.”
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Does climate change make stroke, MS, migraines, dementia worse?

Review of hundreds of studies sees increased neurological risk in climate change
Climate change and pollution are making troublesome neurological disease symptoms worse, according to new research in Neurology, the journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
The authors reviewed 364 studies from 1990 to 2022 on climate change, neurological disorders, temperature and pollutants to reach their conclusion. As Forbes summarized findings, “extreme weather events accelerated by climate change are associated with an increase in strokes, migraines and seizures, an increase in hospital visits among patients with dementia and worsening severity of multiple sclerosis symptoms.”
The studies all involved adult subjects, not children.
The World Health Organization has referred to climate change as “the single biggest health threat facing humanity.”
The report said extreme weather is marked by drastic temperature change, high temperatures and heat waves.
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“Studies” by “experts” have shown that eating ice cream causes headaches. Thus, cold causes headaches, not warm.
The leftists have brain freeze. Good theory.
Yes, I get a slight headache every time I eat ice cream. I eat it too fast. Then I let my mouth warm up a little and the headache goes away. Then I eat some more ice cream.
Clowns to the left of me , clowns to the right……………
Where did their subjects live? There hasn’t been any warming in the US since the 1930s.
Yeah, they can’t be living in the United States because the U.S. has not been experiencing rising global average temperatures. It’s much cooler today in the U.S. than it was in the 1930’s, and the U.S. has been in a temperature downtrend since that time. So I guess us Americans can thank our lucky stars that we don’t have rising temperatures and so won’t suffer from all those maladies the Climate Alarmists claim will happen to people experiencing rising temperatures.
The Climate Change God, James Hansen, declared that climate trends have been fundamentally different in the U.S. than in the world as a whole.
These Climate Change Alarmist Authors should start putting a disclaimer in their future studies. When they describe some future disastrous event caused by CO2, they should put in there “except in the United States” since the U.S., according to Hansen, does not suffer from unprecedented warming.
https://web.archive.org/web/20050112211708/http://www.giss.nasa.gov/research/briefs/hansen_07/
The Hansen 1999 U.S. chart on the left, and the bastardized Hockey Stick global “temperature” chart on the right.
Hansen tries to explain the difference in the temperature profiles. The U.S. shows no unprecedented warming, whereas the bastardized Hockey Stick shows we are living in the hottest time in human history.
All the regional, written, unmodified surface temperature records from around the world resemble the U.S. temperature profile. None of them resemble a Hockey Stick.
Global temperature data sets are dominated by weather stations in urban areas suffering from UHI effects. U.S. weather stations have a higher percentage in rural areas than do global sites. Or so I’m told.
Congrats to the WUWT team for publishing a climate alarmist article verbatim. ie, without any commentary to say it’s BS. It would be nice if also some climate apologists showed up in the comments just to show that WUWT doesn’t prohibit them (they comment pretty regularly, I wonder why they haven’t shown up on this one).
Reading newspapers can do it. The print is so much smaller these dsys
You can take a Tylenol or you can shut down the electric grid.
Your choice.
This is pure trash, the people who paid for this study need to be fired, the people who conducted this study need to be fired and the people who published this study need to be fired.
Geomagnetic storms can cause increases in stroke, cardiac arrhythmia and some other health issues. One study showed a 19% increase in stroke. It’s not the radiation, its the electricity which makes sense on affecting one’s heart. Also reported was mental health issues, again from changes in the electric field. Minuscule changes in temps I don’t think so.
Parkinson’s, stroke, MS, migraine, & dementia, all worse in the winter.
How about giving us a list of the health problems, or problems in general, that global warming/climate change isn’t causing. It would be a short one.
Story tip
Jane Fonda blames climate change on white men. Wants them jailed.
https://www.foxnews.com/media/jane-fonda-blames-white-men-climate-crisis-calls-arrest-jail
“Hanoi Jane” is the one who should have been jailed for treason years ago.
I just saw a clip of her on Newsmax making all those radical leftist accusations against white men. She wasn’t making much sense, but that’s common for radical leftists like Jane.
I looked at the actual abstract. It is very different from the press release. The researchers were honest about the limits of their findings. The school’s public relation crowd, not so much. From the abstract: “For all primary headache ED diagnoses, we observed an association of 7-day average wildfire PM2.5 (odds ratio [OR] 1.17, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.95–1.44 per 10 μg/m3 increase) and by subtype we observed increased odds of ED visits associated with 7-day average wildfire PM2.5 for tension-type headache (OR 1.42, 95% CI 0.91–2.22), “other” primary headache (OR 1.40, 95% CI 0.96–2.05), and cluster headache (OR 1.29, 95% CI 0.71–2.35), although these findings were not statistically significant under traditional null hypothesis testing. Overall PM2.5 was associated with tension-type headache (OR 1.29, 95% CI 1.03–1.62), but not migraine, cluster, or “other” primary headaches.…Although imprecise, these results suggest short-term wildfire PM2.5 exposure may be associated with ED visits for headache.”
Emphasis added.
Abstract here: https://headachejournal.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/head.14442
I’ve seen public relations nonsense like this first-hand. Without getting into proprietary details, a company I was in announced triumphantly that our system had been integrated with another system to improve public safety. Nope. The press release was a complete fabrication.
I looked at the actual abstract. It is very different from the press release.
Typical.
Sounds like the IPCC.
As someone who has had primary progressive MS for 27 years I can say a few things with authority;
1) I rarely get headaches. This was true both before and after MS started.
2) Like most people with MS I have heat sensitivity. I am quite comfortable at 73 or 74 F. But at 78F or higher I get really weak. Thank God for A/C. My utility company DTE generates 54% of its electricity from coal and 14% from NG. So thank God for fossil fuels too.
3) I’ve always had hay fever, but it is not nearly as bad now as it was years ago when there was less CO2 .
While I don’t get headaches I can say the CAGW crowd give me a pain in the southern part of my anatomy
i have to concur. anytime i travel somewhere overly hot and sunny and humid the first and last, say 6 hours, of my stay are always accompanied by a severe headache. I have found that extending my stay for more than 7 days mitigates the effect.
Something that doesn’t exist (in the real world) can’t cause anything.
The (Man Made) Global Warming, now called “Climate Change” due to lack of … Warming – Does not exist …
Covid-poison-jab does!!
Since here in calgary I experience swings of 70c or more summer to winter I call bs.
What a load of crap.
There are people who say a chinook can trigger a migraine but that is a 20-30c swing in less than an hour accompanied by pressure change.
Obviously that is different.
Absolute, pure, magnificently stupid nonsense.
Stress can cause headaches — reading idiocy like this study thus can cause headaches.
Ah yes. Global warming causes warts, moles, colds, sore assholes and makes childbirth a misery. Beware .
They talk about “pollution”.. so NOT CO2
… and they forget to mention that in general, pollution from cars and industry has been greatly REDUCED over time.
The whole piece is a non-fact-based piece of propaganda excrement.
Ayup, we’ve cleaned up the air so well it’s causing the temperatures to gradually increase. No more UV blocking soot
To quote a highly technical medical term …
“what a load of bollocks” !!
Climate change seems to be producing a lot of BS.
These ‘researchers’ should be deeply ashamed of themselves.
But, I rather think they are just sitting there giggling at their own audacity.
And cashing the checks for what they are paid to produce garbage data.
As William M. Briggs says, Science is broken. Too many ‘scientists’ trying to be relevant by producing bad science. Briggs states his case here:
Why Science Is Broken & How To Fix It
Temperature changes? Yesterday morning’s ‘overnight low’: 58°F. Yesterday’s high: 95°F. This in south-east Arizona at 4,600 ft elevation.
People can get used to most anything, if they don’t succumb to stress-producing propaganda.
“Experts suggest that a spike in average temperature due to climate change can impact the changing foliage and pollen in some areas.”
Where has this “spike” occurred? 😉
Good question. They need to define “spike”.
Is an approximately 1℃ change in over 120 years a “spike?” Is no change from the late 1990s to 2015 a “spike?”