| Your skepticism is reasonable. It does sound like an extraordinary claim. The relationship between migraine and weather is a studied phenomenon. I admit that I don’t personally understand the research on this topic, but I trust my neurologist. I do know that the proxy data for weather changes is barometric pressure, so it’s often specified in that way: “changes in the barometric pressure cause migraines for some people”. However I find the concept easier to explain to people with the phrase “changes in weather” because, in my experience, most folks don’t really know the relationship between the barometer and the weather. The Mayo has a layman’s discussion on the topic of weather and migraine: https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/migraine-head... EDIT: I forgot to mention. I “know” about the correlation because I’ve done hundreds of days of migraine journaling over the years and used that to find probable triggers. Unfortunately, that’s essentially the state-of-the-art in the field. :-/ |
https://www.amnh.org/explore/ology/earth/make-your-own-weath...