Here's some information regarding
pain! Don't forget to listen to YOUR HEALTH SOLUTION RADIO on Saturday,
December 1st at 8AM on WNTP990AM as our guest Cheryl Myers,
an integrative health nurse, author and expert on natural medicine
will be discussing pain and how to deal with it. You can call in to
the show at 877-990-9687 with your questions. If you can't listen to our
live show, you can listen in at www.yourhealthsolution.com or www.soundcloud.com/yourhealthsolutionradio
Pain is felt when electrical signals are sent from nerve endings to
your brain, which in turn can release painkillers called endorphins and
generate reactions that range from instant and physical to long-term
and emotional. Beyond that, scientific understanding gets painfully
fuzzy. Here's what's known:
1. Scientist don't understand pain
When you're in pain, you know it. But if scientists could fully grasp how pain works
and why, they might be able to help you more. The American Academy of
Pain Medicine defines pain as "an unpleasant sensation and emotional
response to that sensation." Some pain is the result of an obvious
injury. Other times, it is caused by damaged nerves that are not so
easy to pinpoint. "Pain is complex and defies our ability to establish
a clear definition," says Kathryn Weiner, director of the American
Academy of Pain Management. "Pain is far more than neural transmission
and sensory transduction. Pain is a complex mixture of emotions,
culture, experience, spirit and sensation."
2. Chronic pain shrinks brains
If you have chronic pain, you know how demoralizing and debilitating
it can be, physically and mentally. It can prevent you from doing
things and make you irritable for reasons nobody else understands. But
that's only half the story. People with chronic backaches have brains
as much as 11 percent smaller
than those of non-sufferers, scientists reported in 2004. They don't
know why. "It is possible it's just the stress of having to live with
the condition," said study leader A. Vania Apkarian of Northwestern
University. "The neurons become overactive or tired of the activity."
3. Migraines and sex go together
It may not eliminate the phrase "Not tonight, honey ..." but a 2006
study found that migraine sufferers had levels of sexual desire
20 percent higher than those suffering from tension headaches. The
finding suggests sexual desire and migraines might be influenced by the
same brain chemical, and getting a better handle on the link could lead
to better treatments, at least for the pain portion of the equation.
4. Women feel more pain
Any man who has watched a woman having a baby without using drugs
would swear that women can tolerate anything. But the truth is, guys,
it hurts more than you can imagine. Women have more nerve receptors
than men. As an example, women have 34 nerve fibers per square
centimeter of facial skin, while men average just 17. And in a 2005
study, women were found to report more pain throughout their lifetimes and, compared to men, they feel pain in more areas of their body and for longer durations.
5. Some animals don't feel our pain
Animal research could offer clues to eventually relieve human
suffering. Take the naked mole rat, a hairless and nearly blind
subterranean creature. A study this year found it feels neither the pain
of acid nor the sting of chili peppers. If researchers can figure out
why, they might be on the road to new sorts of painkilling therapies
for humans. In 2006, scientists found a pathway for the transmission of
chronic pain in rats that they hope will translate into better
understanding of human chronic pain. Lobsters feel no pain, even when
boiled, scientists said in a 2005 report that is just one more salvo in
a long-running debate.
Live Science
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