Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - Who is the woman who can predict the weather?

Who is the woman who can predict the weather?

According to the Daily Mail, Kina Robson, a 29-year-old woman from Newcastle, England, suffers from a strange migraine that occurs four or five times a week. As long as she has a migraine attack, it will definitely rain immediately and the day after tomorrow. If she has a worse headache, it will rain heavily. Sally Kinna is like a barometer, and her weather forecast is even more accurate than the weather forecaster at the Meteorological Observatory.

Many years ago, Lisa Keener suffered from a strange migraine when she gave birth to her son. In the worst case, she will have migraines several times a day. When Salikina went to see a doctor, the doctor only prescribed some common painkillers. However, none of these drugs worked, and her migraine began to get worse. Today, Salikina takes nine migraine pills every day.

Although "migraine" messed up Lisa kina's life, one day she was surprised to find that it would definitely rain the day after tomorrow as long as she had a migraine attack. If she has a worse headache, there may be a heavy rain. Sally Kinna can even predict the amount and duration of each rain according to the degree of headache.

At first, Salikina thought it was a coincidence, but later she began to record the relationship between the time of migraine attack and the time of rain. As a result, she was shocked to find that every day before it rained, she would suffer a migraine attack as accurately as a clock! Today, Sally Jinna has been called "a living barometer" and "a weather vane girl" by her friends.

The miracle that Sally Kinna accurately predicted the weather through "migraine" puzzled medical experts deeply. It is reported that half of migraine sufferers think that their headaches are caused by changes in temperature and air pressure. Although scientists acknowledge the potential relationship between migraine and temperature and air pressure, why changes in temperature or air pressure can cause migraine has always been an unsolved mystery.

Some scientists speculate that the reduction of air pressure may reduce the oxygen content in human blood, thus causing vasodilation and migraine. Other medical experts speculate that the change of air pressure may affect the liquid in the skull that protects the brain, thus increasing the pressure on the brain and leading to migraine.