China Naming Network - Eight-character lottery - Who is the woman who can predict the weather?

Who is the woman who can predict the weather?

According to the British "Daily Mail" report, Sakina Robson, a 29-year-old woman from Newcastle, England, suffers from a strange migraine problem that occurs four or five times a week. Whenever she gets a migraine, it's bound to rain soon. If her headache was more severe, it would rain heavily. Sakina is like a "living barometer", and her weather predictions are as "accurate" as the weather forecasters at the weather station.

Years ago, when Sakina gave birth to her son, she suffered from a strange migraine problem. At its worst, her migraines would attack several times a day, causing her to suffer. When Sakina went to the doctor, she was prescribed some ordinary painkillers, but they had no effect and her migraines began to get worse. Today, Sakina takes nine pills every day to treat migraines.

Although the "migraine" problem made Sakina's life chaotic, one day she was surprised to find that as long as she had a migraine attack, it would definitely rain the day after tomorrow. If her headaches were more severe, there might have been a heavy rainstorm. Sakina can even predict the amount and duration of each rain based on the level of headaches.

Sakina thought this was a coincidence at first, and then she began to record the relationship between her migraine attacks and rainy times. She was shocked to find that every day before it rained, she would Hit a migraine attack like clockwork! Today, Sakina has been nicknamed the "living barometer" and "the weathervane" by her friends.

The miraculous fact that Sakina relies on "migraines" to accurately predict the weather has deeply puzzled medical experts. It is reported that half of migraine sufferers believe that their headaches are caused by changes in temperature and air pressure. Although scientists acknowledge the potential link between migraines and temperature and air pressure, why changes in temperature or air pressure trigger migraines has always been a mystery. Unsolved mysteries.

Some scientists speculate that reduced air pressure may reduce the amount of oxygen in the body's blood, causing blood vessels to dilate and lead to migraines. Other medical experts speculate that changes in air pressure may affect the fluid in the skull that protects the brain, thereby increasing pressure on the brain and triggering migraines.