Weather sensitivity (meteorosensitivity, meteoropathy) is a condition in which the human body reacts to changes in weather factors (atmospheric pressure, temperature, humidity, geomagnetic activity). The scientific community recognizes the reality of this phenomenon, although its mechanisms are not fully understood. Age is one of the key factors influencing the degree and nature of meteorosensitivity, which is related to physiological changes, the accumulation of chronic diseases, and the body's adaptive reserves.
Children, especially those of a younger age, have relatively high resistance to weather changes. Their autonomic nervous system is more plastic, blood vessels are elastic, and compensatory mechanisms work effectively. However, there are risk groups:
Infants (up to 1 year): Their thermoregulatory system is imperfect. Sudden changes in temperature (heat, cold) can lead to overheating or hypothermia, restlessness, and sleep disturbances.
Children with chronic diseases: For example, children with asthma often experience a deterioration in their condition during increased humidity, fog, or sudden cooling, which triggers bronchospasm.
Adolescents during the period of hormonal reorganization: The instability of the autonomic nervous system during puberty can enhance the reaction to geomagnetic storms or sudden changes in atmospheric pressure, manifesting as headaches, weakness, and fluctuations in blood pressure.
Interesting fact: A study conducted in children's hospitals in Tokyo showed a statistically significant increase in asthma attacks in children in the days preceding powerful typhoons, when there were extreme drops in atmospheric pressure. This demonstrates an indirect effect of the weather through changes in the concentration of allergens in the air and the state of the respiratory tract.
In this period, weather sensitivity often debutates or intensifies. The main reason is the appearance of the first chronic diseases or functional disorders that become 'targets' for weather factors.
Vascular reactions: In people with vegetative-vascular dystonia, hypertension, or migraines, sudden changes in atmospheric pressure (especially its drop) can cause severe headaches, dizziness, and tachycardia. Hypotensive people often feel a sudden drop in energy.
Musculoskeletal system: The initial manifestations of osteochondrosis, arthritis are felt as "aching" in joints and the spine during increased humidity and decreased temperature. This is due to changes in joint cavity pressure and edema of nerve roots.
Psychological and emotional sphere: In practically healthy people, during prolonged cyclonic weather (cloudy, low pressure), there may be a decrease in work efficiency, drowsiness, and mild depression due to changes in the production of serotonin and melatonin.
Example: A 35-year-old patient with migraine without aura notes that in 80% of cases, the attack develops 6-12 hours before a sudden warming in winter or the arrival of a cyclone with rains in spring. This coincides with research data: one of the most powerful triggers of migraines is exactly the change in temperature and the drop in atmospheric pressure.
After 60-65 years, weather sensitivity reaches its peak. According to different data, 50 to 70% of people in this age group are susceptible to it. The reasons are complex:
Decreased adaptive potential: Metabolic processes slow down, functional reserves of the cardiovascular, nervous, and endocrine systems decrease.
Bouquet of chronic diseases: Atherosclerosis, ischemic heart disease, hypertension, osteoarthritis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Each of these diseases worsens under certain weather conditions.
Changes in the walls of blood vessels: Blood vessels lose elasticity, their reaction to changes in external pressure becomes rough and inadequate, which may provoke hypertensive crises, disturbances in cerebral circulation, and angina attacks.
Decreased sensitivity of baroreceptors: Receptors that respond to changes in pressure work worse, which slows down and distorts the body's adaptive response.
Key fact: The most dangerous for the elderly is not low or high blood pressure, but its sharp fluctuations (more than 7-10 mm Hg per day). Cardiologists' research shows that on days of such fluctuations, the number of emergency calls for myocardial infarction and stroke increases by 15-20%. Especially sensitive are people in the first days after a strong geomagnetic storm.
Interesting fact: There is a phenomenon of "meteorostabilization" — when the body adapts to prolonged abnormal weather (for example, a two-week heatwave), but a breakdown occurs when it normalizes. For the elderly, the transition to a new regime is particularly difficult, and a deterioration in well-being may occur exactly when returning to habitual weather parameters.
Women are statistically more sensitive to weather than men, especially during the reproductive age. This is associated with more complex hormonal cycles and greater instability of the autonomic nervous system. During menopause, against the background of a decrease in estrogen levels, which protect the vessels, weather sensitivity often worsens. For men, an expressed connection with the weather usually manifests later, on the background of the development of cardiovascular diseases.
Prevention and mitigation of symptoms should take into account age:
For children and adolescents: It is important to follow a daily routine, hardening, and sufficient physical activity in the fresh air to train adaptive systems.
For adults: Control and treatment of chronic diseases, prevention of hypodynamics, training in stress tolerance techniques (biofeedback methods, breathing practices), which can help mitigate vegetative reactions.
For the elderly: On days of unfavorable forecasts — a mild regimen, refusal from heavy food and physical exertion, blood pressure control, taking prescribed medications. It is especially important to avoid a sharp change in climate when traveling (for example, a flight from winter to summer).
The connection between age and weather sensitivity is a vivid illustration of the law of diminishing adaptive reserves and the accumulation of pathological changes in the body. If in youth the reaction to the weather is more functional and reversible, then in middle age and old age it "sticks" to specific diseases, becoming a clinical marker of them. Understanding these mechanisms allows not just to put up with weather sensitivity, but to develop effective personal strategies for prevention, improving the quality of life in any weather. Science confirms: the older a person is, the more they need to consciously manage their lifestyle as a "meteorological barometer" of their own health.
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