Neurasthenia Vascular

Vascular neurasthenia (outdated “vascular neurasthenia” outdated) is a diffuse neuroendocrine disorder characterized by a pathological reaction of neurons in the hypothalamic-diencephalic region, causing increased neuro-vegetative excitability and dysregulation of the activity of internal organs. Neurasthenia affects people of any age, profession and level of education.

True neurasthenia, or neurasthenic neurosis, is precisely a reaction to external stressors, either transient, situational, that is, short-term, and possibly rare. True neurasthenia, which occurs as a result of prolonged stress, namely, long-suppressed strong nervous imbalance, suffered mental trauma. Exhaustion caused by chronic neuropsychic overstrain depletes not only the central but also the peripheral nervous system of a person. Moreover, the trophism of not only the central nervous system is disrupted. The disturbance also occurs in the smallest peripheral vessels. In particular, the vessels of the arms, legs, head, peripheral capillary blood flow from neurasthenia are not completely and completely restored. And impaired peripheral blood flow, in turn, affects the functions of all internal organs and systems of the body along the chain, cerebral circulation suffers, and brain nutrition is disrupted. Unfortunately, increased nervous excitability