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Dale’s Black Eye Palsy, a Cause of Cluster Headaches Postulate
Dale Fairly, November 21, 2016, first revision January 1, 2017
Definition
Dale’s Black Eye Palsy is a neurological disorder of certain nerves of the face, located in the orbit. Similar to Bell’s palsy which disrupts an output cranial nerve, Dale’s Black Eye palsy disrupts an input cranial nerve. With Bell’s palsy, the loss of motor function makes diagnosis easy. However, Dale’s Black Eye palsy is a loss of input signals, less understood and difficult to recognize. Both disorders disrupt part of the same autonomic nerve. These nerves, the Infraorbital, the Zygomatic and the Greater Petrosal nerves (V2+) become entrapped in the orbit floor. This entrapment leads to nerve compression. The nerve compression reduces the nerve signal. The weak signal results in palsy of the terminal systems. Symptoms occur when the nerves undergo nerve friction, intermittent and/or constant nerve compressions. Initially, the friction may only be transient, resulting in symptom free periods. Orbit floor movement produces intermittent nerve compressions, proportional to the orbital floor stress. Whereas, significant entrapment, infection, inflammation, cold, or rest produce longer constant compression. Strong sudden compression causes significant stimulation, and significant distress suddenly, like a ‘funny bone’. Soft, constant compression is like a leg ‘falling asleep’. Similarly, after these compressions, some recovery time is necessary before normal function returns, although longer. In most patients, Dale’s Black Eye Palsy is progressive, as the bones age.
Allow me to give some background to my idea. We are just regular people, who experience cluster headaches. At times we are fine. Sometimes we suffer debilitating nerve pain and dysfunction. Then we are fine again. I was embarrassed and frustrated that mostly I was fine.
I got to thinking. That sort of pattern reminded me of when I had a pinched nerve in my back. I would be fine, then all of a sudden, pain and dysfunction; I couldn’t move. Sometime later the pain would subside and function would return. I could move around again. About this time, my brother in law John suggested I go see a chiropractor. I thought his concern was nice, but crazy. I wasn’t going to waste any of my money on that. Well, I had another attack (of course). Nothing was helping. I remembered what John had said. I tried to imagine how a skull might be manipulated and started pressing, bending, and twisting at my head, while keeping my head and neck still. Low and behold, I found that certain grips could increase my pain, and other grip positions would reduce my pain. I kept experimenting with successive attacks and found specific areas to press or pull to help reduce my pain. It tuned out that these beneficial maneuvers all act to open my bad orbit. Again I was reminded of back pain. If I moved ‘wrong’, I would get a pinch in my back. It sure seemed similar. But how could that be, which nerve?
In general, our problem affects the same areas on each of us, such as: specific skin on the face, sinus issues, tears, etc.. Which nerves supply those systems? The skin and sinus are easy. They are innervated by the Infraorbital and Zygomatic nerves, branches of the Maxillary nerve, a branch of the Trigeminal nerve. But what about the tears? The lacrimal gland is innervated by two nerves, the lacrimal nerve of V1 and the somatic Greater Petrosal nerve, also referred to as the ‘lacrimal feedback loop’. I had to think long on this problem. Finally I found an answer that matches my dysfunction. When I cut an onion, both my eyes will tear. I consider this to indicate the Trigeminal (lacrimal V1) nerve is functioning properly, protecting both my eyes from external insult. However, when I have trouble, I can only cry emotional tears out my good eye. Emotions are part of the autonomic system. That’s the lacrimal feedback loop. A lack of nerve signal might cause this.
Okay, I had these three nerves identified. Next, I followed these three in toward the brain. They first all meet on the orbit floor, before exiting the orbit out the inferior fissure. I’ve had imaging done. That is the same spot that shows irregularity on my images. Ding, ding, ding, bells went off in my head. Might we all, who suffer, have an extra tight spot in that location? I'm just a regular guy. I’m sure most of you feel the same way when you’re symptom free. Those nerves supply necessary input and output information. Our dysfunction arises when the nerves are critically squeezed, kind of like a hose, less signal will flow, disrupting the end systems relying on these nerves. I know this sounds a little simplistic. Sometimes the simple answer is the best answer. Do cluster headache symptoms result from a yet unrecognized nerve pinch point? Is it similar to pinch points in the back, or carpal tunnel syndrome? My experience is yes. I have been able to use this postulate to answer and explain all my questions about this disorder. I look forward to helping you have a better understanding of this situation.
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