Skip to content
thelocalreport.in thelocalreport.in

Thelocalreport.in is a news website which includes national international,#sports,#wealth,#weather, #entertainment and other types of news.

  • Jammu and Kashmir
  • World
  • India News
  • Uk
  • Canada
  • United States
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
thelocalreport.in
thelocalreport.in

Thelocalreport.in is a news website which includes national international,#sports,#wealth,#weather, #entertainment and other types of news.

Explained: How Brain Can Miraculously Switch Off Pain

Arun Jain, 16/02/2025

In the second world war, the physician Henry Beecher observed that some of his soldier patients, despite being injured on the battlefield, required no strong painkillers to manage their pain. In some cases, the injury was as severe as losing part of a limb.

A truly remarkable phenomenon had come into play – the effects of fear, stress and emotion on the brain had switched off their pain. But how does this work – and how can we use it to our advantage?

We all struggle with pain at times. The burning of indigestion, the wince of a scald from the kettle. The sharp stabbing of a sliced finger.

But despite its unpleasantness, pain has a critically important purpose, designed to protect the body rather than harm it. A fundamental concept to first understand is that you do not detect pain – it is a sensation. A sensation that your brain has created – from the information it receives from the countless neurons (nerve cells) which supply your skin.

These specialised neurons are called nociceptors – they detect stimuli which are noxious, or potentially damaging to the body. This stimulation might range from a mechanical cut or crush injury, to extreme hot or cold temperatures.

So, if you touch a hot iron, or stand on a sharp nail, the correct reaction is to move your hand or foot away from it. The brain responds to pain by initiating muscle contractions in your arm or leg. In doing so, any further damage is averted.

The course of information, rushing along one neuron to another in a relay, is carried as electrical currents called action potentials. These begin at the skin, travel along nerve highways and into the spinal cord. When the information reaches the uppermost level of the brain – the cerebral cortex – a sensation of pain is generated.

ALSO READ  Ukraine Truce Could Be Reached In "Weeks": Macron After Meeting With Trump

Blocking pain signals

Many different factors can interfere with this transmission of information – we don’t perceive pain if the route to the cortex is blocked. Take the use of anaesthetics, for instance.

Local anaesthetics are injected directly into the skin to deactivate nociceptors (like lidocaine) – perhaps in A+E to perform stitches. Other agents induce a loss of consciousness – these are general anaesthetics, for more extensive surgical operations.

Pain is also a very variable experience. Commonly, we ask patients to quantify their pain by giving a value along a scale of nought to ten. What one person would consider a five out of ten pain, another might consider a seven – and another a two.

Some patients are born without the ability to sense pain – this rare condition is called congenital analgesia. You might think this confers an advantage, but the truth is quite the opposite. These individuals will be unaware of circumstances where their bodies are being damaged, and can end up sustaining more profound injuries, or missing them entirely and suffering the consequences.

How to trick your brain

What is more extraordinary is that we all possess an innate ability to control our pain levels. In fact, a natural painkiller is found deep within the nervous system itself.

The secret lies in a structure located in the very middle of your brain: the periaqueductal grey (PAG). This small, heart-shaped region contains neurons whose role is to alter incoming pain signals reaching the cerebral cortex. In doing so, it is able to dampen down any pain that would otherwise be experienced.

Let’s consider this in practice using the extreme example of the battlefield. This is an instance where sensing pain might actually prove more of a hindrance than of help. It might hamper a soldier’s ability to run, or assist comrades. In temporarily numbing the pain, the soldier becomes able to escape the dangerous environment and seek refuge.

ALSO READ  Taiwan Will Keep Most Advanced Chip Technology At Home: Officials

But we encounter many examples of this ability coming into action in our everyday routines. Ever picked something in the kitchen that you suddenly realise is extremely hot? Sometimes that casserole dish or saucepan descends to the floor, but sometimes we are able to hold on just long enough to transfer it to the stove-top. This action may be underpinned by the PAG shutting off the sensation of clasping something too hot to handle, just long enough to prevent dropping it.

The substances which generate this effect are called enkephalins. They are produced in many different areas of the brain (including the PAG) and spinal cord, and may have similar actions to strong analgesics such as morphine. It has also been suggested that long term or chronic pain – which is persistent and not useful to the body – might arise as a result of abnormalities within this natural analgesic system.

This begs the question: how might you go about hacking your own nervous system to produce an analgesic effect?

There is growing evidence to suggest that the release of painkilling enkephalins can be enhanced in a variety of different ways. Exercise is one example – one of the reasons why prescribed exercise might be able to work wonders for aches and pains (backache for instance) instead of popping paracetamols.

Besides this, stressful situations, feeding and sex might also affect the activity of enkephalins and other related compounds.

So, how could we go about it? Take up strength or endurance training? Alleviate our stress? Good food? Good sex? While more work is needed to clarify a role for these options in pain management, their reward might be greater than we thought.

ALSO READ  Trump Says US Needs Greenland For International Security

Pain remains a complex, poorly understood experience, but the future is bright. Only last month, the FDA approved the use of a new medication Journavx for managing acute pain.

It works by switching off nociceptors in the peripheral nervous system, and therefore preventing pain signals getting to the brain. This represents a potential new breakthrough in a world which has become dependent on addictive opioid medications, such as morphine and fentanyl.

Developing new painkilling treatments relies on the work of pain researchers to help unravel the intricate neuronal circuitry and function. There is no denying that this is going to be difficult task. But in considering the neuroscience of how our bodies generate and suppress pain, we can hope to understand how they can act as their own healers.The Conversation

(Author: Dan Baumgardt, Senior Lecturer, School of Physiology, Pharmacology and Neuroscience, University of Bristol)

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)


World BRAINExplained: How Brain Can Miraculously Switch Off PainPain

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Follow Us On Google News

  • Bailey says bank should take concerns over personal finance ‘very seriously’
  • Gujarat: Nearly 9 lakh citizens avail free AMTS rides during Diwali
  • Experts say that jumping rope is more effective cardio than running. I tried for a month
  • Action on illegal occupation of PMAY EWS houses in Ahmedabad; 367 under investigation
  • Fred Vasseur reacts to Ferrari support after Christian Horner rumors
  • Health conditions that may increase your risk of dementia
  • Reeves says Brexit had bigger impact on UK economy than critics predicted
  • The 5 best Oral-B electric toothbrushes, tried and tested by an expert
  • What age is too old to run? this is what science says
  • Home Minister Amit Shah will celebrate Gujarati New Year in Ahmedabad tomorrow
  • The Vegetable That Can Lower Cholesterol and Fight Infection
  • Dalit man kidnapped, beaten, made to drink urine in MP; two arrested
  • Botox injections could help relieve pain for Ukrainian war amputees
  • Manipur: Ukhrul district awaits NSCN-IM leader’s homecoming after 50 years
  • Inside the Royal Lodge, Prince Andrew’s 30-room mansion
  • Myanmar army arrests thousands after raids on notorious cyber crime sites
  • Kerala CPM leader accused of threatening students protesting in Idukki Nursing College
  • I Visited the Birthplace of Country Music – and It’s Not Where You Would Have Guessed
  • Beneficiaries of PM Surya Ghar Yojana in MP’s Shahdol are calling it a ‘blessing’
  • New Zealand man tells how he survived encounter with black bear in Japan
  • Operation Sindoor-themed kites sell like hot cakes in Lucknow on Diwali
  • UK and Indonesia agree to send home a British woman facing death penalty for drugs
  • C-VIGIL app: ECI empowers voters to report election violations
  • K-pop star apologizes after performing ‘inappropriate’ song at celebrity charity event
  • Watch: Statement of eyewitness of Charlie Kirk murder case now silent!
  • Kerala: Violent protests against factory processing waste break out in Kozhikode
  • Big change for traveling with pets in Europe – Simon Calder explains everything
  • 8 arrested for beating woman to death on suspicion of witchcraft in Purulia
  • Lewis Rees-Zammit returns to Wales squad after two-year absence
  • President Draupadi Murmu reached Kerala on a four-day visit
  • A cheese lover’s cheat sheet for choosing the right mozzarella for every dish
  • Order to release water from Chennai’s Chembarambakkam lake as water flow increased after heavy rains
  • Aston Villa warn fans not to display political messages at Maccabi Tel Aviv game
  • Jammu and Kashmir
  • World
  • India News
  • Uk
  • Canada
  • United States
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Jammu and Kashmir
  • World
  • India News
  • Uk
  • Canada
  • United States
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Add thelocalreport.in As A Trusted Source in Google

Canada News

  • Supporters of Edmonton teen Samuel Bird rally outside the court during the accused murderer's trial
    Supporters of Edmonton teen Samuel Bird rally outside the court during the accused murderer’s trial
  • Third suspect arrested in shooting death of 8-year-old boy
    Third suspect arrested in shooting death of 8-year-old boy
  • Power restored to Billy Bishop Airport pedestrian tunnel
    Power restored to Billy Bishop Airport pedestrian tunnel
  • ALCS Game 7 preview: Jays, Mariners fight for World Series berth
    ALCS Game 7 preview: Jays, Mariners fight for World Series berth
  • Two more teenagers charged in stabbing death of 14-year-old Abdul Aziz Sarr
    Two more teenagers charged in stabbing death of 14-year-old Abdul Aziz Sarr
  • Edmonton teen Samuel Bird's body found, arrest made
    Edmonton teen Samuel Bird’s body found, arrest made

India News

  • Gujarat: Nearly 9 lakh citizens avail free AMTS rides during Diwali
    Gujarat: Nearly 9 lakh citizens avail free AMTS rides during Diwali
  • Action on illegal occupation of PMAY EWS houses in Ahmedabad; 367 under investigation
    Action on illegal occupation of PMAY EWS houses in Ahmedabad; 367 under investigation
  • Home Minister Amit Shah will celebrate Gujarati New Year in Ahmedabad tomorrow
    Home Minister Amit Shah will celebrate Gujarati New Year in Ahmedabad tomorrow
  • Dalit man kidnapped, beaten, made to drink urine in MP; two arrested
    Dalit man kidnapped, beaten, made to drink urine in MP; two arrested
  • Manipur: Ukhrul district awaits NSCN-IM leader's homecoming after 50 years
    Manipur: Ukhrul district awaits NSCN-IM leader’s homecoming after 50 years
  • Kerala CPM leader accused of threatening students protesting in Idukki Nursing College
    Kerala CPM leader accused of threatening students protesting in Idukki Nursing College

Us News

  • Watch: Statement of eyewitness of Charlie Kirk murder case now silent!
  • Where to Get American Made Ivermectin (6 Month Supply!) at a Price You Can’t Beat
  • The Miraculous Healing Power of DMSO: Nature’s Forgotten Cure for Cancer, Pain, and Regeneration
  • Sweden revives Cold War food stockpile amid growing conflict fears
  • The War on Light: How Governments and Big Pharma Keep You Sick By Blocking Healing Photons
  • Check this out: Hillary Clinton Was Completely Unrecognizable 50 Years Ago – Sidney Sweeney?

Uk News

  • Bailey says bank should take concerns over personal finance 'very seriously'
    Bailey says bank should take concerns over personal finance ‘very seriously’
  • Experts say that jumping rope is more effective cardio than running. I tried for a month
    Experts say that jumping rope is more effective cardio than running. I tried for a month
  • Fred Vasseur reacts to Ferrari support after Christian Horner rumors
    Fred Vasseur reacts to Ferrari support after Christian Horner rumors
  • Health conditions that may increase your risk of dementia
    Health conditions that may increase your risk of dementia
  • Reeves says Brexit had bigger impact on UK economy than critics predicted
    Reeves says Brexit had bigger impact on UK economy than critics predicted
  • The 5 best Oral-B electric toothbrushes, tried and tested by an expert
    The 5 best Oral-B electric toothbrushes, tried and tested by an expert
  • World
  • United States
  • India News
  • Uk
  • Canada
  • thelocalreport.in Company Details
  • Terms and Conditions
  • DNPA Code of Ethics
  • Correction Policy
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Rss Feeds
©2025 thelocalreport.in | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes