Stuff You Should Know - How Pain Works
Episode Date: November 17, 2020In recent decades we’ve come to understand that there’s a lot more to pain than: touch hot stove/feel burning hand. Pain is a far more sophisticated experience and, unfortunately, a system that ca...n often go haywire, with terrible effects. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, ya everybody, about my new podcast
and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say.
Bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know,
a production of iHeart radios, How Stuff Works.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark.
There's Charles W. Chuck Bryan over there,
and Jerry's out there running around somewhere.
We just gave her a hot foot.
It was hilarious.
And this is Stuff You Should Know.
Tried.
Our continuing exploration of pain.
What else have we talked about with pain?
We did one on the pain scales a couple of years ago,
and then we did one on something about perceiving pain.
Well, this one, this one,
this is just totally Stuff You Should Know then
because we did a bunch of more niche stuff
and now we're going back and doing the umbrella topic.
Right.
And we're talking about pain,
which is a super ancient, old evolutionary trait,
I guess, that's shared basically
throughout all living things.
I would say it's a pretty fair guess.
Is it?
I think so, yeah, because there's something that pain,
pain specifically, which is this,
we'll get into defining it
and how hard that is in a second,
but it seems to be a fairly universal,
almost universal process where our body says,
hey, there's something really bad going on,
say on your hand.
So move your hand away from wherever it is in space right now.
And hopefully that will help
keep it from getting further damaged.
Like pain is a signal saying, do something dummy, move.
And it's, I mean, that's, you know,
you see it in basically any animal we've ever encountered,
including the beaver and the porcupine.
That's right.
And by the way,
we did other people who can't feel pain 10 years ago.
Yeah, it actually seems longer ago than that.
That's funny, cause I thought pain scales was forever ago
and it was 2017.
So I have no sense of time anymore.
So we are talking about pain, Chuck.
You feel pain, right?
Do you have a high pain threshold or are you sensitive?
Well, you know, it's funny cause I went back
and listened to the pain scales
and I kind of chatted about that for a bit,
but I have a pretty high pain threshold.
Yeah.
Okay.
I would say mine's average.
Let's just go with that.
I wonder what I said in the pain scales up.
Cause I, there's no way I didn't respond to your, your thing.
You know.
It'll be a mystery.
So apparently pain is the most common reason
that people go seek medical attention.
But when they go seek medical attention
as we talked about in the pain scales episode,
the whole reason there is such a thing as a pain scale
is because it's a fully subjective experience.
And it's really difficult to describe.
And it's taken medicine like many, many years
to get to a point where they tell the people,
their training doctors and nurse practitioners
and medical staff, like if somebody tells you
they're in pain, they're experiencing pain.
You have to take them at their word.
And that's actually kind of a new development
because there are plenty of times when it appears
that there's absolutely nothing wrong
and that the person shouldn't be in pain.
And for years, doctors just kind of treated people
like that, like kooks and didn't believe them,
which was very sad.
And now we're finally figuring out their situations
where you can be experiencing pain,
even though there's no reason for you
to be experiencing pain,
which really underscores just how subjective it is.
That's right.
In 1973, there was an actual definition
for pain that was introduced
that has a couple of really important caveats
that will kind of play out through this episode.
Pain is an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience.
There's the first caveat.
Associated with actual or potential tissue damage
or described in terms of such damage,
which is a big caveat there
because you can walk into a doctor's office and say,
I've got some big time tissue damage doc.
I'm experiencing big time pain
and they can look you over and be like,
and this guy didn't have any tissue damage at all.
Right.
So that's in the actual definition of pain.
So I think that the reason they caveated that
was for the very simple reason that pain can be emotional.
And I don't mean like real emotional pain.
I mean, a physical pain that is maybe made worse
by emotion or brought on by emotion,
or that you really don't have a pain,
like you've got a chronic pain, let's say,
but nothing's going on under the hood to cause it.
Yeah, and we've learned so much about pain since 1973
that I saw that just this past July,
the International Association for the Study of Pain
updated and revised their definition.
It's still basically the same,
but they've included a lot of stuff
that we're gonna talk about in this episode.
Does it say pain, whatever you say, dude?
Right, that's the definition.
They said pain is 2020.
Yeah, it is so far, at least.
There's a bunch of different types of pain though.
We're actually not that many, but there's a few.
Acute pain, which is very short lasting
if you put your finger on the burner of the stove
or something like that or slam it in a window,
that's gonna be an acute pain where it's really helpful,
so your body's gonna say, wait a minute, that's super hot.
Or by the way, dummy, you just put your finger in a window
and you immediately have a reaction
to stop that immediate acute thing from happening,
even though the pain is gonna still be there.
It's not like you slam your finger in the window,
yank your thing away and shake it a little bit
and it's gone.
Right, it can be depending on the level of pain,
but it makes sense that it would still linger
even in acute pain, which from what I can tell
is like the ideal version of pain.
It's like you said, it makes you stop doing
whatever you're doing, but the fact that it still
hangs around for another minute,
it's almost like it's teaching you a lesson.
Like not only stop doing that, don't do that again.
Yeah, and there's some overlap in these by the way.
So when we talk about the next one, no susceptive pain,
this comes about from tissue damage,
like real tissue damage by like physical
or a chemical agent.
We're talking a chemical burn or a trauma or a surgery.
This can also include slamming that finger in the window.
It can also include, you worked out really hard
the day before and you're really sore the next day.
Yeah, as long as there's some sort of like mechanical reason
or some sort of damage to tissue
or even temporary damage like a sore muscle.
And it also includes malignant pain, which is cancer pain,
which is where a tumor starts growing in your tissue
and presses on nerves and blood vessels
and creates pain like that.
And no susceptive pain is what most people think of
when they think about pain.
And it can be both acute and chronic,
but I guess the best way to kind of differentiate
no susceptive pain from the rest of it is
there is actually something going on
that is causing the pain signal to be created.
And like I said, it can be short lasting or long lasting.
And it's different from a different type of pain
appropriately enough called neuropathic pain,
whereas no susceptive arises from tissue damage.
Neuropathic arises from damage to the actual nerves themselves.
Yeah, like, I don't know if you remember this story
from almost a year ago, it was last October
when I hit my shin on my bed so hard
that water started leaking out of my eyes.
I wasn't crying, it was just literally water
coming out of my eyes.
And I'd never felt pain like that before.
And it was clearly some kind of literal nerve damage
because for three or four months,
I had like a three inch by three inch square on my shin
that was completely numb.
Wow.
And it's the worst pain, like physical pain
I've ever felt in my life.
I mean, that would definitely qualify as neuropathic pain.
You clearly messed up the nerves in that little area.
And you're lucky that it only lasted three months
because apparently neuropathic pain,
which can include everything from hitting your shin
to banging your funny bone, your elbow,
to things like sciatica or even multiple sclerosis.
Anytime the neurons in your nerve fibers are damaged,
that's neuropathic pain.
And it can last, it can very easily translate
from acute pain over to chronic pain,
which is pain that lasts six months or longer,
which can itself be nociceptive or neuropathic.
It can also unfortunately be psychogenic chronic pain can be,
which is where you have lasting sustained pain
over six months or longer
for no good reason whatsoever.
Yeah. And this is, you know,
it gets really sort of murky and confusing here.
We are not saying that chronic pain is all in your head,
but we're saying that in some cases
that there is no reason behind you
continuing to feel chronic pain.
But so many people suffer from chronic pain.
I think roughly it kind of varies, you know,
depending on the year,
but somewhere in the neighborhood of 20 to 25%
of adult Americans suffer chronic pain every single year.
And it's, when you hear people talk about that,
like I just feel bad for them.
I can't imagine what it's like to walk around
in constant pain.
And it's probably even more frustrating
when a doctor can't trace it to a thing.
Like, hey, we fixed that.
It shouldn't be hurting anymore.
Right. Especially if they're being patronizing
and treating you like you're kooky.
Well, that's a bad doctor. You should not go.
Sure. But again, I mean, like,
I feel like people with fibromyalgia or chronic fatigue,
I don't know if you experienced pain with chronic fatigue,
but have long been treated like they're nuts,
like it's all in their heads just because, you know,
science has not been able to identify exactly what the deal is.
Yeah. I would say if your doctor is like that,
go to a doctor with a little better bedside manner at least.
They might be saying the same thing,
but they should treat you with respect.
Yeah. And if they're wearing oversized clown shoes,
so much the better.
That's usually a dead giveaway for a great doctor.
That's right.
I don't think we said that we talked about nociceptopain,
but nociception is taken from the Latin word for hurt.
And pain is its own thing, like pain perception.
We're talking about what's going on
with the central nervous system
and the peripheral central nervous system as well.
And how it processes this information
is really interesting and still cloudy
because the brain is involved.
And we've done dozens and dozens of podcasts
that involve the brain and at some point during all of them,
we usually say something like,
this is kind of their best guess right now
because the brain is still such a mystery.
Yeah. We have made like advances by leaps and bounds
since the sixties when we kind of started
to change our understanding of pain
and definitely refining it.
But one of the things we figured out
is that nociception itself is separate
from the experience of pain.
It's like the body giving the brain information
about something that's going on with your body right now,
but it's not pain itself.
Pain is the brain responding to that information.
And so nociception, as we'll see, is kind of this process
where your body detects some sort of noxious stimuli
and the nociceptors, your specific kind of little sense receptors
that are tuned to pain, as we'll talk about.
They send a signal to your brain saying,
hey, there's something going on here.
And then in your brain, your brain starts to sort
through the whole thing and decides how to respond.
So nociception and pain, they're very much intertwined,
but they're definitely different things.
And we've actually seen that one can exist
without the other.
Yeah. I mean, they've done studies that,
and I mean, we had to have talked about this
and other people that can't feel pain.
Right.
Congenital analgesia.
I don't remember ever saying those words before.
I think we had to have.
Sure, there's no way we got it on it.
Although knowing us, it's possible we walked around that one.
Well, maybe so.
But there are studies, including ones on that,
people who can't feel pain that have shown
that nociception can occur without the experience of pain
and pain can be experienced with the absence of nociception.
So it's sort of a two-way street.
Yeah, that's like that psychogenic pain
where there's no reason for you to be feeling
that pain right then, right?
Yeah, and because it's the brain, and you put it in here,
it's like, it sounds funny,
but your brain is what's feeling the pain.
Like when you smash that hand in a window,
you might think that's your hand feeling the pain,
but technically it's your brain, if that makes sense.
Yeah, or even that, like, that hand,
that window smashing your hand set off
a specific unique kind of signal
that transmits a pain signal directly.
Your brain, your brain experiences the pain.
That's just not quite right.
That's actually Rene Descartes' interpretation of it.
And considering, well, considering he was working
in the first half of the 1600s,
he wasn't that far off the mark,
especially considering that before him,
the Greeks had thought, basically up to Descartes,
everyone had thought, starting with the Greeks,
that pain was like a spirit intrusion.
It was like something external.
And in fact, our word pain comes from pina, like subpina,
which means penalty.
So this pain was considered a punishment from the gods.
And Descartes was like,
no, I think this is an internal process.
And he had the broad strokes of it.
It's just that he didn't have the details
that we have now today.
Yeah, he kind of got,
well, he got one half of it pretty right.
But I mentioned it was a two-way street.
It's a two-way street in a lot of ways.
Because what we've learned since Descartes
is that we do have pain signals
that go up from nerves in the body to the brain
to say, hey, I'm hurt.
Those are called ascending signals.
But then we also have another signal going,
I'm just gonna call it downstream,
for lack of a better term,
descending signals that come from the brain
that can kind of mute the pain
or turn off the pain signals.
And that's, as we'll see later,
when it comes to medication and stuff,
it's sort of managing that two-way,
like whatever traffic light is on that two-way street.
Yeah, well, that was like a huge thing, Chuck,
like to figure out that, wait a minute,
like first of all, the experience of pain
is totally in the brain, right?
Your hand itself isn't actually hurting.
Your brain is what hurts.
It just feels like it's coming from your hand.
And then secondly, the idea that your brain
can influence the experience of pain,
that was just revolutionary.
And so as a result, we've come to kind of see pain
as the brain, there's a neuroscientist named
V.S. Ramashandran, who's just brilliant.
And he said that pain, this is paraphrasing him,
he said that pain is the brain's opinion
of the current state of your health.
You got no pain, it's all good.
You got pain, your brain is interpreting,
there's something wrong with like your hand
or your leg or your guts or something like that.
And it's just an opinion and the opinion
can be gotten wrong too.
Well, you know what they say about opinions.
Yeah, everybody's got an elbow of them.
All right, I think we should take a break.
And we're gonna come back and dive into some
hard science right after this.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called David Lasher
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bring you back to the days of slip dresses
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All righty, so your brain has an opinion
about the current state of your health.
We're still at the stage where we're sort of testing out
how pain is generated and how we experience it.
But what we kind of think right now
is what we mentioned a little bit earlier
is that some of the sense receptors located
on the nerve endings are really finely tuned
to different kinds of pain, but really tuned
to different kinds of thing that might cause pain,
like a hot stove or a needle going to your arm.
Yeah, and you can pretty much divide them
into three categories, mechanical,
which is pulling, stretching, tearing, cutting,
chemical, which say like exposure to acid or something,
and then thermal, like heat or cold.
And the idea that these no-susceptors are capable
of being triggered by exposure to those kinds of stimuli
from the external world,
that that is what kicks off the no-susception process.
Yeah, and they're all very different
and they have different ways
of communicating with the brain.
There are some that do things really, really fast.
There are some called A-fibers.
They have a little,
it's kind of like a little express train
instead of having to make stops along the way.
It has a fatty myelin sheath
that's gonna insulate the electro conduction
basically on the wire.
And it really just zaps it there really, really fast.
Not a lot of information loss is going on.
And that's like that first really intense pain you feel
when you burn your hand or when you slam it into the window
is kind of what's going on with the A-fibers.
Right, and then you've got C-fibers
which aren't insulated and they are slower conducting
but they also have a bunch of,
they recruit a bunch of them to conduct signals
from different parts or different areas
to the brain to say,
hey, this is actually pretty problematic.
We got a real thing going on here.
And they account for the follow-up
like usually burning, throbbing kind of sensation
that can be followed by that first like bolt of pain
that the A-fibers deliver.
And then that's from the actual like nociceptors.
There's other stuff that happens too.
Like if you cut open your hand,
those damaged cells, you know, spill their guts.
And so like potassium and glutamate and substance,
P-starch start like change start firing off
like other neurons in the area.
You might have an inflammatory response.
So things like histamine show up
and they start setting off other nerve fibers too.
So it's more than just the, you know,
the cut hand nociceptor is telling the brain
that something's happening.
Like a whole bunch of different responses from the area
are going to arrive at the brain
and produce this really complex rich message saying,
here's generally what's going on and here's how bad it is.
You ever had a bad burn?
Yes.
Man, those are the worst.
They are pretty bad.
I don't even remember what happened,
but I definitely have burned myself pretty bad.
Yumi has this same spot on her hand
that she gets in like the convection of it.
Like basically every time it heals,
she just re-ups it again.
She's always got this little thing on like,
I think it's her pinky knuckle on her right hand.
And she always like hits the same spot on the, oh man.
Every time you get that lady a good glove, a hot mitt.
Yeah, I think by now it's just so callous that she...
That's just dead.
She fights sailors with it these days just to show it off.
Yeah, those burns really linger.
And that's like every time I hear of someone
or see somebody that has been in a fire
and had really, really bad burns over a lot of their body,
I just, I can't imagine the lingering pain
that they go through.
I know we've talked about this on some episode before,
but just those burns, it seems like they hurt forever.
Yeah, I mean, you've got exposed nerves fibers
to just the air, which as we'll also see,
when you undergo a particularly brilliant experience
of acute pain, it can be so thorough
in its energizing of your nerves
that they actually become sensitized.
So like they become more sensitive
than they would have before that,
which is actually also a problem with chronic pain too.
But if you experience burns like that deep
over all of your body,
not only are you going through the normal pain,
you're probably more sensitive now to normal stuff
like air blowing on your exposed nerves
than you would have been otherwise.
And that just makes it that much worse.
Yeah, and then some things that you might think really hurt
don't hurt like cuts.
I've had cuts before that don't hurt.
They might freak you out to look at it
and to see like your skin exposed
and some people are really freaked out by the blood.
I've had other people I know,
I've never broken bones
that have had some pretty gnarly injuries like that
that said it didn't really hurt that much.
Yeah, they're walking around like a skeleton
you hang on the door with their arms
just flopping back and forth.
It's really interesting how it all works.
But it really underscores how the brain
can get its opinion of what's wrong with the body
based on the pain information wrong sometimes.
A lot of times like think about a hangnail.
A hangnail is no threat whatsoever to your survival
but those things hurt or a paper cut.
No one's going to die from a paper cut
but it really, really hurts too.
It can be overblown, it can be underblown
but it really goes to show like it's the brain
taking all this different information together
and saying here's how bad I think this is.
Yeah, it's pretty cool and painful.
So let's say you get hurt.
Let's say you slam your hand in the window
like I was talking about, which I think has happened.
I don't know why I keep going to that.
Got your worst fear?
I don't know, I don't think it's ever happened.
That better not be your worst fear, that is not that bad.
That'd be hard.
It's a lot easier to shut your hand in a car door
than a window, but-
Oh man, that hurts.
Either way, yeah man, I had knock wood.
That hasn't happened to me in a long time.
Yeah, same here.
Every time my daughter shuts the door
which I try to let her do whatever she can on her own
I'm always just like, don't do it.
Do you put oven mitts on her hands first?
No, no nanny stayed at our house.
Okay.
So you get hurt on your hand, let's say.
The signal that is gonna travel,
it travels through the, into the gray matter
of your spinal cord.
And there are gonna be a lot of different connections
made with the spinal neurons there.
And it's gonna cover a broad area of the body
which is why sometimes if you get hurt,
especially if it's like an internal injury,
you don't know exactly where the pain's coming from.
You might tell your doctor,
you just might rub around your whole torso
when in fact what's actually hurt is a fairly small area.
Yeah, or it could be like a completely different part
of your body or kind of near.
It's called referred pain.
Like if you're having a heart attack,
you usually feel pain in your arm.
Yeah, yeah.
If you have brain freeze,
that's your blood vessels on the roof
of your mouth expanding because they're cold.
But you feel it on like your forehead really terribly
which doesn't make any sense.
So yeah, I think that's from the nerve
or the C fiber information
where it makes it tough to also figure out
where it's coming from.
You ever been to a cardiologist?
No.
I'm going to one this week.
Have you?
I'm going to one this week, man.
I've known two people in the past like a month
that have dropped dead that are like my age.
What?
One friend of mine from college had been experiencing
chest pains and he went to drove himself to the hospital
and like collapsed and died on the way into the hospital.
Oh my God.
That's terrible.
And I haven't been out of touch since college
but it really hit me hard to where I was like,
you know what?
I want to go like just see what's going on in there.
That's great.
Yeah.
And then get some preventative or not preventative
but just some proactive tests done,
you know where they see how your arteries are doing
because I've got cholesterol issues
because of my family history and stuff.
Oh yeah.
And I don't want it to be one of the things
where they're like,
oh well it turns out that, you know,
you were 90% clogged this whole time.
Right.
So I don't care what they say,
I'm going to demand those tests.
Yeah.
I think you probably will have to pay for them out of pocket
but that's not the end of the world
if like you have concerns about it.
No, I want to know.
And if you have genuine concerns,
a cardiologist might actually go ahead
and prescribe it anyway.
Well, I don't have concerns in that
I have chest pains or anything but.
Right.
But if you have a family history, they may go.
Yeah.
I just, I want to know what's going on.
I'll pay for it.
I think that's great.
And actually it's funny,
like you had suggested we do something like that too.
So maybe we'll see you at the cardiologist's office.
Well, I think for women,
you can go get heart screenings for women very easily.
And I don't know if it's because I thought it was for both
and I talked to the lady on the phone,
she said, oh, that's only for women.
And I guess that's because women are less likely
to talk to doctors about their heart
because I think it's maybe generally thought of
as something that men experience more.
Yeah.
Yeah, I guess now that you say that
it does seem like more of a man.
So I think they're trying to be proactive
and saying like, hey, women,
you need to think about this stuff too.
So we'll offer like a hundred dollar heart screening
or something like that.
Gosh, is there anything socialized medicine can't do?
So we were talking about those first,
those first set of spinal neurons.
Then you have secondary neurons
that are going to send their signals up
through the white matter of the spinal cord.
And this is an express way where all the traffic
from all of these lower segments
just speed up the spinal cord.
Yeah, yeah, which is normal
for any kind of sensory information,
but the pain information follows the same super highway
and it goes through your brainstem, your medulla,
and then it synapses again
onto a third set of neurons in your thalamus,
which is your brain's relay center.
And then from there, things start to get kind of murky.
It goes out to different parts of the brain
and we'll talk about pain in the brain in a second,
but one thing that it does,
it was helpful to me to imagine a pain signal
as like a pinball when you hit it with the flippers.
Say that's like you're cutting your hand.
That pinball goes up
and it's going up to the top of the pinball machine,
but on the way, it goes through all these other things
like these gates that it flips around
360 degrees a bunch of times.
Imagine that it's doing that in your brainstem
or in the gray matter of your spinal cord.
It's going through all these different things
and as it does on its way to that final destination
of the brain's somatosensory cortex,
it can have effects on the way too.
Like if it's bad enough,
it may enter what's called a spinal reflex loop
where that pain signal doesn't even make it to the brain
before part of it gets redirected back down to say your hand
to make your hand jerk away from that hot stove
before it even hits your brain.
Literally before your brain even knows
that there's pain going on,
you have a signal going down to your arm to say,
move that hand, dummy.
Yeah, because if you think about burning your hand,
the burn, I mean, it's very fast and very fast succession.
The actual burn, pain burn happens
after you've jerked your hand away.
Right.
And like I said, it's pretty lickety-split,
but you jerk that hand away.
It's not like you keep it there and you're like,
oh my goodness, I feel pain on my hand.
Oh my Lord, it's got fire on it.
I should probably move it eventually.
Another thing that can happen is pain signals
can set off your fight or flight pathways.
Oh yeah.
As it's going through the medulla,
it's been a long time since we talked about fight or flight.
Yeah, it's been so long,
they added a third one freeze since the last time
we talked about it.
It's like an old friend coming back to visit,
but bringing a new obnoxious friend with it.
Yeah.
So it could set that off through the medulla
and what happens there is your heart rate's gonna go up,
your blood pressure's gonna shoot up,
you're gonna start sweating if you're me, rapid breathing,
and it really depends on the intensity of the pain,
but it can definitely set off that fight or flight
or I guess freeze.
And again, all of this is before it even gets to the brain.
And then finally, like I said,
when it does get to the brain,
we're not quite sure what happens there.
We know from observations that the brain is definitely
involved and one of the ways that we know this
is because you will move your hand.
Sometimes it's not an immediate reaction,
but sometimes it's a little later.
So clearly some of those signals get sent
to the motor cortex to say,
okay, get that hand out of there.
But we also can tell from things like the fact
that if you consciously distract yourself
from thinking about the pain with something else,
like you remember how Edward Norton in Fight Club,
when he had that lie on his hand,
he kept trying to think of like a snow covered forest
or something.
And he went to his happy animal, I think was a penguin.
That's right, that's right.
He started to try to concentrate on that.
And that, it didn't work then,
but it could have worked depending on
what other kind of tissue damage was going on.
And it really kind of underscores the fact that
if you think about something else, your pain may decrease.
Well, if the brain has nothing to do
with pain or controlling pain,
then that wouldn't happen at all.
And so observations like that and some other ones show us
that, okay, the brain's definitely involved in this
in some way, shape or form.
And pain is not just the reception of a pain signal
coming from the lower parts of the body up to the brain,
but there's also a reciprocal thing like you were saying
where the brain descends or there's descending pathways
that the brain uses to say, okay, all right,
let's just all chill out down there.
Okay, let me figure this out.
Everybody just shut up, shut up.
I can't think when you're all screaming at me.
Yeah, and as those signals are on the way down,
there might be those ascending nerve signals going up.
And those descending signals could overpower and say,
hold on, you stop right there, buddy.
I'm trying to calm this person down.
You just stay put.
Right.
And so there's other things that we figured out
that can actually influence your experience of pain.
Like to say that it's subjective is just no joke.
There's probably no experience more subjective
than the experience of pain.
And there's all these different factors that are involved
that will have an impact on how much or how little
pain you experience, you know?
I think improv comedy is the first.
That's right.
Man, to see good improv is just,
it's just so rare, but it's so good when it is good.
Oh yeah, I mean, I've seen a handful in my life
that just blew me away and I've seen a bunch more
that it's tough to get through.
It's like horror movies.
Like a truly great horror movie is really tough to beat,
but there's a lot of really bad horror movies out there.
Yeah, a lot of good ones these days though.
We're in a new renaissance.
What you got?
Well, I mean, in the past five or six years,
I think it follows in the Babadook and...
I didn't like the Babadook.
Hereditary and I think there's been a bunch
of new horror masters.
So now this was not a horror movie,
but I want to shout out Inola Holmes on Netflix.
Have you seen it?
No.
It's a coming of age movie about Sherlock Holmes's
younger sister.
Oh, interesting.
And it's super cute, but it's also really smart,
like very smart and it takes it for granted
that the viewer is smart in paying attention.
It's a really great, great movie.
Great movie.
I want to check that out.
It's Millie Bobby Brown as Inola Holmes.
She's just about as charming as they come.
Yeah, she's wonderful.
I'll check that out.
Yeah, not a horror movie,
but definitely worth watching regardless.
Is that based on any literature or anything?
Or did they just say like,
hey, what if he had a little sister?
I hadn't thought about it,
but I think it's the ladder of the two,
which makes it all the more amazing
because they did such a great job
of capturing that whole world.
Very cool.
Yeah.
Where are we?
Should we take a break?
Yeah, why not?
Let's take a break and then we'll come back
and talk about a few of the factors
that influence your experience of pain.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses and choker necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
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The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to
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I'm Mangesh Atikular.
And to be honest, I don't believe in astrology.
But from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life.
In India, it's like smoking.
You might not smoke, but you're going
to get secondhand astrology.
And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has
been trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention.
Because maybe there is magic in the stars
if you're willing to look for it.
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in.
And let me tell you, it got weird fast.
Tantric curses, major league baseball teams,
canceled marriages, K-pop.
But just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious
show about astrology, my whole world came crashing down.
Situation doesn't look good.
There is risk to father.
And my whole view on astrology, it changed.
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
I think your ideas are going to change too.
Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
So we were saying before we started talking about Enola
Holmes and horror movies that there
is a lot of different things that will influence
an individual's experience of pain.
And it has to do with not just you biologically,
but weirdly also you sociologically too.
Yeah, and this first one, age, is to me
a little counterintuitive.
In some ways, as you age, your brain circuitry
is just going to degenerate a little bit.
That's just the sad fact of the matter.
And if you are one of our seniors,
and if you're a senior that's listening, hello,
got an email from a lovely 80-year-old lady
the other day that just warned my heart.
Oh, yes, she was great.
She was great.
So if you are one of our senior listeners and you,
you might have a lower pain threshold and more problems
dealing with pain.
This seemed a little counterintuitive
because I could also see a case where the neurons don't
fire in the correct way such that you could be feeling
something painful and not really realize it.
So the way I took it was a little different,
that it was almost like, you know how when you form a habit
or a memory or something, it's because the neural connection
has gone over again and again.
So like that pathway is just kind of blazed
a little more clearly.
My interpretation was that the same can be true with pain
to where once you fire a few times or over and over again,
it becomes easier to conduct that pain signal
more efficiently.
And so that would account for sensitization.
That's how I took it.
But I, you know, hey, I'm no VS Rama Sham Drawn.
There's also gender.
And because we're talking about medical research,
they are basically still saying men and women
and they're not doing research along the gender spectrum.
So having said that, research shows that women have
a higher sensitivity to pain than men.
Could be maybe psychosocial stuff at work
because, you know, men are supposed to not show their pain
or not report pain or just suck it up, dude.
There could be that at work.
There also could be sex-linked genetic traits
or hormonal changes that might change that pain perception.
Right, or even the culture you're raised in,
like women in Uganda, I read are expected to be stoic
in the face of pain, whereas men in Ukraine
are expected to not experience pain at all
or show any kind of pain whatsoever.
So like the idea that culture can affect your interpretation
or how you experience pain is kind of weird
if you think about it.
It's also weird because I know many, many women
who would say, are you kidding me?
My husband is the biggest whiny baby every time he gets sick.
Right.
And I generally suck it up as the wife.
It's so Ugandan.
It's so Ugandan.
There's also memory.
Like if you've experienced pain before,
your memory of going through that pain
can impact how you experience it a follow-up time too.
Yeah, and for both ways,
like I used to be really, really, really scared of needles.
And I think that was because I went a long time
without getting shots.
I think when I was younger and in college,
like I wasn't giving blood like I should
and I wasn't getting flu shots like I should.
But now that I'm a real sentient adult
and responsible adult, I have needles in me all the time.
And they don't really hurt that bad anymore.
So when I go back, I get that initial fear of the needle
because I've always had it, but then my brain tells me,
hey, Chuck, it's not that bad, remember?
Do you just suck it up and get the shot?
My sister-in-law is like a genuine shout-no
and run out of the room like needle person, yeah.
Needlephobe, that's a great band name.
Oh my God.
That's pretty good.
That's the best band name in years, Chuck.
What kind of band is that?
Needlephobe is clearly some sort of metal,
maybe new metal if it were gonna be ruined,
but there's definitely something in there.
Maybe along the lines of like Queen's Reich or something.
Yeah, I could see that.
Or maybe even like horror metal.
Oh yeah.
Like that Norwegian stuff.
Sure.
Okay, so it's about to get weirder, Chuck.
So you're talking about needles.
If you look at a needle injected into your arm,
it hurts more than if you're not looking.
Even if you're thinking about the needle injecting
into your arm, being injected in your arm,
just not looking at it makes it hurt less
than the studies have shown, which is weird.
But in a sense, it also makes sense
because you're being provided with additional information
about that through your eyes.
So your brain has more information
than it otherwise would have,
which can actually make it hurt more.
Yeah, and I know I've mentioned this.
I still gotta look.
I used to request a mirror to look at dental work
as it was going on.
I don't do that anymore.
I try and just check out,
but I always have to look at the needle.
There's no way.
Yeah, same here.
I'm like, do it slower.
Yeah.
You're not a needlephobe.
You're a needle, whatever the opposite is.
File.
That's right.
A needle file.
So, and then there's emotions too.
And not just, you know, like you were saying earlier,
there's something, there's a different thing,
psychic pain where you are,
your emotions are so overwrought
that you actually feel physically uncomfortable
or hurt from it.
That's different.
Your emotions can actually affect physical pain as well.
Yeah, and back when we were trying to understand,
and we're still trying to understand this,
but why emotions and stuff might influence pain
in the 60s, of course,
when all this kind of cool research was going on,
there were a couple of dudes named Ronald Melzak
and Patrick Wall who threw up a proposal
about a gating mechanism existing among the connections
in the body sensory pathways that can help determine
how you're gonna feel pain
and how that works with the brain.
Yeah, because so there's the ascending painful pathways
and then the descending,
let's all just mellow out pathways.
And I don't know if we knew that before Melzak and Wall
or if we know it as a result of them,
but the current general understanding of pain
is this gate control theory
where there's stimulation of these pathways
going up to the brain.
And they have to be of like a certain amount
to overcome an inhibitory neuron.
And so if I just like press my arm,
I'm sending somatosensory information
through those same pain pathways,
but the inhibitory neuron that keeps those,
the pain projector neurons from firing are not overcome.
But if I took a butcher knife
and cut that same part of my arm,
they would be overcome.
The inhibitory neuron would basically be turned off
by the signal, the intensity of the signal
and that projector neuron would fire.
And now our brains would have that pain signal saying yeah.
So in that case, the gate is fully open for business.
And when otherwise, when there's no pain,
no sensory information, the gate's closed.
Or if it's just normal somatosensory information,
the gate's still closed.
It's just when it's that intensity of the pain information
that the gate flies open.
Yeah, and this is interesting
because it doesn't explain everything,
but it does explain like when you,
like if you smash your thumb with a hammer
and your reaction is to go and shake your hand really hard
or to suck on it maybe,
if you smash your finger with a hammer,
it seems like a weird thing to do.
I know it is, but it works.
It does.
That stimulates your normal somatosensory input
to those projector neurons
and that's gonna help override the projection neurons
that basically kind of close that gate down.
Okay, so now that you understand the gate theory of pain,
and this is the general understanding
among Western science and medicine of pain,
this is pretty much the common knowledge now,
you can understand how it can go wrong.
And so they think that this also explains
how you can experience psychogenic pain
where people have fibromyalgia or chronic pelvic pain
or tinnitus or TMJ or chronic back pain
when there's no reason whatsoever
for them to experience this.
The really great author and surgeon, Atul Gawande,
I believe he writes for The New Yorker.
He's also, he writes some books as well.
He's one of the best writers out there right now
and he's also a very accomplished surgeon.
And he likens that situation to a faulty car sensor
where if you have a sensor on your dashboard
coming on saying like, hey, you got an engine problem.
You go to the mechanic and the mechanic's like,
you don't have an engine problem.
Eventually they're going to figure out
that the problem's with the sensor itself.
And they think that this is because of this gate
being open, the sensor is open
even though there's nothing tripping it,
that that is the problem,
that that is what accounts for psychogenic pain.
Very interesting, and that makes sense.
Yeah, definitely.
So when it comes to managing pain,
there are a bunch of different routes you can go
depending on what your doctor might recommend,
depending on what you as a human,
what road you want to go down.
And we'll get into these,
but these vary from like over-the-counter medications
to prescription medications to surgery
to go into a massage therapist
or an acupuncture specialist, acupuncturist.
But as far as the medications go,
you've got a couple of different kinds.
You've got your non-opioid analgesic,
like this is a Tylenol or an Aleve or an Advil
or something like that.
And it's going to act at the side of the pain.
When you have that damaged tissue,
it releases enzymes that stimulate
the pain receptors locally.
And what these do is they interfere with those enzymes,
they're going to reduce inflammation
and hopefully reduce pain.
Yeah, which is really interesting
because that is your mind saying,
this pain is not nothing that my brain needs to worry about.
I'm going to actually go to the site
and cancel out those pain signals where they're beginning
because I'm judging that they're not that important.
Right. It's pretty cool.
Yeah, it is cool, but these can have effects
on the liver and kidneys if you use them a lot.
So, you know, you don't want to pop an Advil every day
if you have like back pain, that kind of thing.
Yeah, and then there's opioids,
which they actually go to the gate
and they can close the gate on the one hand.
And then they can also go to your brain
and excite the descending pathways,
which will bind with like opioid receptors.
And of course, those are hugely addictive
and have a huge possibility of overdose as well,
but they do help treat pain a lot.
Yeah, we should do one of the opioids
in the opioid epidemic at some point.
I agree, I agree.
It's been one of the darker spots of the new era.
Yes. The new era?
What is that even?
The dystopia?
I don't even know.
The last 10 or 15 years is what I mean.
I call that a new era.
The modern era is what I meant.
Sure.
What else do we have there?
You can actually use medicines
that aren't meant for treating pain to treat pain
like anti-epileptic drugs.
Off-brand stuff.
Anti-depressants, anesthetics,
they all do things like,
they block nerve conduction in some specific area.
And so they weren't meant to be treated or used for pain,
but they actually can come in handy
for things like chronic pain or neuropathic pain.
Yeah, you can also have surgery as kind of a last resort.
If you have severe,
I've had a couple of friends actually who have had back surgery
where let's say you have a herniated disc
and that thing is compressing on a nerve
as a last resort, they can go in there
and maybe remove a little bit of that disc
that's hitting that nerve and relieve that pressure.
Yeah, and from what I've seen, yes,
that is meant to be a last resort.
There's also like cordectomies where they go in and say,
we're just gonna snip that gate
so that it just doesn't function at all anymore.
They make you a super soldier.
And then there's also alternative therapies
and mental control techniques.
And these work to varying degrees.
One of my favorite alternative therapies
is the TENS unit, Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation.
And it sends electrical impulses from the site of pain
it's basically like a defibrillator for your pain gate.
It's saying your pain gate is open
and it shouldn't be open.
So we're gonna send some nerve stimulation
in the hopes that we can restart that inhibitory neuron
and get it closing that pain gate.
Or and or we can make it all the way up to the brain
and get the brain's descending pathways kickstarted as well.
Is that like when I had a back thing about five years ago
where they gave me this electro stimulator thing
that I put these little pads on the pain zone?
Yeah, and there was like a little handheld thing
about the size of a Game Boy that was connected to you?
Not mine, but I'm sure they're all different kinds,
but you could basically level the amount
of sort of low level shock.
And when you turned that thing all the way up, man,
it was pretty intense.
Yeah, that's a TENS unit.
And as a matter of fact, that's based on some
really ancient thinking.
Apparently a pre-dynastic Egyptians
from like 5,000 years ago used electric catfish
from the Nile for the same effect and impact.
Wow, that's pretty amazing.
Isn't that amazing?
Yeah.
And then we mentioned going to the chiropractor,
massage therapist.
Obviously there are hot compresses and cold compresses.
There's acupuncture.
There is relaxation and hypnosis.
And we've already talked about distraction.
If you want to know what you think about hypnosis,
we did a pretty good episode on it a while back.
So yeah, there are all sorts of mental ways
because they've shown that,
oh, I'm blanking out.
What do you call the drugs that aren't real drugs?
What are the sugar pills?
Placebos.
Placebos, yeah.
Yeah, that placebos have been shown to work sometimes
with limiting pain.
Yeah, yeah, I mean, you can trick the brain for sure
into not feeling pain, like phantom limb treatment usually,
or sometimes involves a mirror,
where you put a mirror over the amputated limb
that's experienced pain and you move the other limb
while you're looking in the mirror.
So it looks like your amputated limb is back
and you're tricking your brain into being like,
oh, okay, it's there, it's fine.
I don't have to experience pain anymore
and it actually works.
Yeah, but there's a threshold there.
Like you can mind over a matter to a certain degree,
but as you say in the article, your mind and your brain
are two different things.
So you can't shut down that gateway just by thinking it away.
No, and there's a real push to believe that
over the last few decades,
but it's becoming clear you can impact it to some degree,
but just not to a full degree.
Yeah, and I think the mind over matter is a person,
like the pain doesn't go away.
You're just able to mentally overcome it such
that you're not gonna either show it
or let it get to you or let it affect you.
Right, you have actually a lower stress response.
And at the same time, it also cuts down on suffering,
which is different from the experience of pain.
It's like associated with pain
and that's like that whole why me thing.
And that seems to be fixated on anticipating more pain
in the immediate future.
And people who are mindful and meditate
can actually cut down and alleviate that suffering.
So the experience pain, but it goes away a lot faster
and their response to it isn't nearly as pronounced.
Right, very interesting.
So it does have an effect, you know?
Yeah.
Chuck, this is a good one, man.
Pain.
Pain in the house.
And if you wanna know more about pain,
well, I'm not even going to suggest what you can do.
How about you just go read up on it a little more?
And since I said that, it's time for listener mail.
I'm just gonna call this the Las Vegas Beavers.
Just got done listening to the Beaver podcast,
which by the way, we got a lot of response on that one.
Sure.
People love their Beavers.
Especially baby Beavers.
Oh yeah, they're the best.
Just wanted to give you a fun little tidbit of information.
Chuck said that you can't find,
or that you can find Beavers almost everywhere
except the desert, which is somewhat true.
They can't live out in the open amongst the cacti,
but the sizable population of Beavers in Las Vegas
is testament to their ability to survive the heat.
There are about 80 to 100 Beavers
living in the Clark County wetlands
just about 20 to 30 minutes from the strip.
That's crazy.
It was a shock when I first heard of this,
but I've since taken several trips to see them.
Thanks for all the work.
Enjoy the show.
That's from Josh.
Very short and sweet.
That's from Josh Eretics.
That's a great, great first name.
Great last name, Josh.
I love how that email just kind of
petered out at the end there.
Yeah.
So we're gonna, his new name is Josh Peter Eretics.
Okay.
Great.
Thanks for the email, JP.
And if you want to be like JP and send us an email,
you can do so.
Wrap it up, spank it on the bottom,
and send it off to stuffpodcast.ihartradio.com.
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Apple podcasts are wherever you listen
to your favorite shows.
Hey Dude, the 90s called David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called David Lasher
and Christine Taylor, stars of the cult classic show,
Hey Dude, bring you back to the days of slip dresses
to Hey Dude, the 90s called on the I Heart Radio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new I Heart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, ya everybody
about my new podcast and make sure to listen
so we'll never ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.