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  2. Could you have brain fog? How to tell and what to do - AOL

    www.aol.com/could-brain-fog-tell-134300121.html

    Brain fog can also be caused by chronic disease, stress, depression, cancer treatments, and many more factors. Let’s take a closer look at brain fog, what might be causing it, and what you can ...

  3. Clouding of consciousness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clouding_of_consciousness

    Brain fog is a common symptom in many illnesses where chronic pain is a major component. [26] Brain fog affects 15% to 40% of those with chronic pain as their major illness. [27] In such illnesses, pain processing may use up resources, decreasing the brain's ability to think effectively. [26]

  4. Is Mild Cognitive Impairment the Reason You Have Brain Fog ...

    www.aol.com/mild-cognitive-impairment-reason...

    This underlying cause is reversible if you quit the meds, but other reversible causes might not be so obvious. Depression or major stress could cause impairment to show up in testing, too, Boyle says.

  5. Mal de debarquement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mal_de_debarquement

    Other symptoms include the feeling of pressure in the brain, mostly around the frontal lobe area, headaches or migraine headaches, ear pain, ear fullness and possibly tinnitus. [citation needed] Fluctuations in weather also affect sufferers, in particularly hot weather and barometric pressure changes.

  6. Why Storms Make You Sleepy: The Science Behind Pre-Storm ...

    www.aol.com/why-storms-sleepy-science-behind...

    We break down the changes your body goes through before a storm, including how it reacts to falling barometric pressure and why it may increase melatonin production. Why Storms Make You Sleepy ...

  7. Weather pains - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weather_pains

    The first publication to document a change in pain perception associated with the weather was the American Journal of the Medical Sciences in 1887. This involved a single case report describing a person with phantom limb pain, and it concluded that "approaching storms, dropping barometric pressure and rain were associated with increased pain complaint."