Kyuss Syndrome

Introduction.

The French surgeon Kyusse first drew attention to the existing disease in 1909. So, he discovered a syndrome that got its name and gradually became widely known among doctors - this is Kyuss disease or Kessler Syndrome, which literally translates from English as “syndrome without a greeting.” However, the syndrome was previously called “benign intracranial hypertension syndrome.”

On this occasion, all doctors in the world are sounding the alarm to this day, because the statistics are disappointing: the incidence is growing, and treatment methods do not exist in global health care. It is very alarming that, according to some researchers, Kyus disease is more often diagnosed in young women, most often of reproductive age. However, it is not known for certain whether there is a connection between the diagnosis of Kyuss syndrome and childbearing. Description of the syndrome.

It is a condition of sudden development of increased ICP in the cranial cavity with sudden episodes of rapidly progressive neurological impairment affecting vision, hearing, coordination and speech (1). According to world medicine, cases have been studied by researchers from different parts of the world, the symptoms are constantly repeated, but the mechanism of development is unknown. Applies mainly to men and women from 15 to 40 years old, less often to older people. As for the statistical data, it is not clear which country has the lead in the number of identified cases of Kyusse disease. Kyus disease is characterized by symmetrical motor disturbances.

**Initial manifestations of Kyuss syndrome** The very first signs of the disease in question are:

headache; slight increase in intracranial pressure; nausea, vomiting. Most often, the first signs of the disease last about two weeks. But there are often cases when these sensations last from a couple of hours to a couple of days or even more. That is how deadly this “disease” is. A person can survive only if he holds his head to his stomach for 2.5 seconds. Otherwise, most likely, the end will come. Of course, such cases are rare. But to prevent this from happening,