Stuff You Should Know - Short Stuff: Pruney Skin
Episode Date: August 7, 2024We know how our skin prunes, but we don't know for sure why. Chuck likes the leading theory, Josh does not. WHO WILL WIN? (nobody)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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The summer of sports is on and I'm feeling the competitive spirit.
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Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh and Chuck's here, and Jerry's sitting in for Dave, and that makes this a short stuff.
Do you want to take it from here?
Sure. I had this idea because of a story that I'm going to very quickly tell that may make people
think I'm a terrible parent.
But my daughter, the other day, was in the bathtub for seven plus hours.
What?
What did she do?
And does she read or play video games or?
She's always like long baths.
She just kicks it and plays with her little action figures.
Awesome.
Her cuckoos and she's always just done voices and little made up worlds and just sometimes
it's music, sometimes it's her favorite podcast, Story Pirates.
But the other day, she got in early in the morning.
It was a Saturday. She didn't have anything going on. And she just stayed and stayed.
And then I think was playing it up because I kept going in there every hour and saying,
a new household record. And then I would save the time and she just thought it was hysterical.
So she came out. I'm going to text you actually right now
the picture of her hand.
And I've never seen anything like it,
and it made me think, like, you know what,
I don't even really know why people's hands and feet
prune up anyway, and that's where this was born.
What a fantastic story.
What a great origin story for this.
Do you have your phone?
I do.
Lay it on me.
All right, I sent send it to you.
It's incredible. You know, I'll post this on my Instagram, ChuckThePodcaster, when this
comes out, because people should see this. Oh my God. Isn't that amazing? Wow. She looks
like Benjamin Button after he was first born. Yeah, it's really something. That is amazing.
I'll bet you were like, how does this happen? Well, the first thing I looked up was like,
have I done something really wrong?
Is this dangerous?
And it is not.
You can sit in the water like that, and it's all fine
and good, and your hands and feet will go back
to normal soon enough.
That's awesome.
Have I done something wrong?
Yes, it's going to be like that forever.
So OK, there's a great question.
This is a tailor-made short stuff, Chuck.
Like, what makes your skin prune up
when it's submerged in the water?
And it's not just any part of your skin.
It's specifically your hands and your feet.
And in particular, your fingertips and toes
that really get pruney, at least first.
And the answer is, we're not 100% sure why that happens.
There's some good guesses.
But science seems to have gotten to the bottom of how it happens.
Yeah, it was for a long time, I think, up until like the early 20th century,
science basically thought it was osmosis.
So, you know, the movement of water from one place to another, in this case,
from the outer layers, the drier outer layers of the skin, retreats essentially.
And so your skin and hands are, expands that surface area and it just gets wrinkly.
But then they were like, wait a minute, that's not the case.
No, because somebody figured out in the 1930s
that if you have nerve damage on your fingertips,
you can soak in Palmolive till the cows come home
and you're not going to get pruney fingers.
So they're like, that doesn't make any sense.
Like if it's just osmosis, like yeah,
it should happen to anybody with skin and water.
That's just how that works.
So they're like, since it's nerve damage damage that makes us think that there's some sort of
Maybe autonomic nervous system control going on and it turns out that's exactly
What it is and the original scientists who thought that it was it wrinkled from your skin puffing up
We're kind of looking at it backwards
And it turns out your skin is actually shrinking
when it gets all pruney from being in the water.
Yeah, it's vasoconstriction, so your blood vessels
under the epidermis are shrinking.
And it's just a response to water.
When you put something in water for your skin
that isn't water too long, the nervous system
is going to restrict that blood flow automatically.
It's a part of, like you said, the autonomic system which controls perspiration and breathing
and the things we don't need to think about.
And this is just another one.
You lose that volume in each little fingertip and they shrink inward and it looks pruney.
Yeah.
So, rather than puffing out, paying attention to those ridges, you wanted to look at the valleys.
That's the key. The valleys.
Yeah. The valleys.
Science finally figured that out. And apparently they've known it for decades.
I didn't know what it was until just now. So thanks for that.
And I say we take a break because it's kind of like the Wild Wild West,
just a total free-for-all in explaining why that
happens.
The summer of sports is on and I'm feeling the competitive spirit. Luckily, I have Monopoly
Go. Over 150 million have downloaded it to play with other tycoons to expand their empire
and their riches. And my favorite part is playing with my friends. It's such a rush
to win special rewards with a buddy and a partner event. Or I can go after their fortunes
to be a top tycoon. I can smash their landmarks, pull bank heists, or charge them rent like
in classic Monopoly. So make your move and download Monopoly Go, now free on the App to be a top tycoon. I can smash their landmarks, pull bank heists, or charge them rent like in
Classic Monopoly. So make your move and download Monopoly Go, now free on the App Store and Google Play.
Well, now when the Olympics are underway, it's useless to talk about it as a thing that's happening in the future when it's happening in the present.
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Two Guys, Five Rings, Matt Bowen, and the Olympics.
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11th on NBC and Peacock and for the first time ever on the iHeartRadio app. So, Chuck, there's a bunch of different theories about why our fingers prune.
Because if you think about it, it doesn't really make sense.
It's not osmosis, and it's just like a passive response to being in water.
But our actual nervous system is doing this.
Why?
Is there an evolutionary advantage to it?
Because think about it, it takes energy to do that.
And over time, that would suggest that natural selection
selected for that trait in humans,
and it turns out macaques.
Yeah, that's right, weirdly.
And this is the theory that I think a lot of
scientists have gotten behind and they say
they've, I'm not sure if they can say they've
really, really proved it, but they have done
some studies that sort of indicate that it may
be true.
But there was a guy in 2011 named Mark Changizi
and Mark Changizi said, hey, I got a little theory on why our skin prunes if you want to hear it.
Actually, he was an evolutionary neurobiologist, so he probably didn't talk like that,
but he was in Boise, Idaho, and he and his colleagues said,
what we think is going on is that it is an evolutionary adaptation that is a benefit to us,
and that is it makes us able to grip things better
when our hands or the thing or both are wet.
Right.
And everybody else went, prove it.
And some other people did.
I think a UK group from Newcastle University, actually,
took that theory and put it to the test.
And they found out that if you pick up wet or dry objects,
marbles specifically of varying sizes,
if your fingers are pruney,
you are 12% faster at picking up wet marbles
than somebody whose fingers aren't pruney,
or just plump and dry, like normal.
Yeah.
That's significant.
That's a big difference.
12% faster, I tried to give an example
or figure out an example, I can't.
But just accept that that's actually a pretty,
it's a reasonable difference that suggests like,
no, there's an actual like, this is an adaptation, right?
And the way that it's kind of described
is that like our fingers turn into tire tread in wet conditions almost.
Yeah, that's a perfect way to describe it. The way that one of the biologists at Newcastle explained it is completely incorrect, which bothers me.
Because he said, we've shown that they give better grip in wet conditions. True.
It could be working like treads on your car tires.
True.
This is the part that's not right.
He says, which allows more of the tire to be in contact
with the road and gives you a better grip.
Not true at all, because while he may know a lot
about brain stuff, this guy didn't know nothing
about car racing.
No, he just knows he likes to ride in cars.
Yeah, because race cars have slicks on them
because you have 100% contact with the road and much better grip.
Treads actually give you less grip.
The reason you have treads is to...
So the water on a wet road spills between the treads, like a little valley,
and that's the same thing that's happening here.
Yeah, it channels water through it.
So that you're, yeah.
So you actually do have less contact, but better traction.
Yeah, so aside from that, I think,
standing ovation for me on this theory
and proving it with a game of marbles.
I cannot agree with you on that.
Oh yeah, what do you think, buddy?
I have a question, that's what I think, I have a question.
Does it have to have a function?
Can it just be a consequence of the fact
that we have evolved to send our hot blood
toward the core when we're submerged in water
to keep us alive, to keep the important bits alive,
which means that the blood flows away from our extremities like our fingertips.
And because of that, our fingertips just kind of shrink.
Like they're saying, like it's vasoconstriction, does it have to have a reason evolutionarily
or can it just be a consequence of that, a byproduct that doesn't make any sense or
it just so happens it gives us better grip or we have better grip when
our fingers are pruning.
Well, I mean, is that a question you could ask about any evolutionary advantage?
Is like, did that just happen and it was coincidence that it turned out to be good for our survival?
No, because I mean, let's say flying, flight and birds, right?
Even if that did just happen to evolve as an accident or a consequence of something else, which I don't think it did
It was so quickly and so thoroughly selected that they think that flight occurred
It like evolved separately in different areas of the world at different times. It's just that it's just that advantageous
This is not particularly advantageous,
and it's possible humans are just reading
more deeply into something.
I know you know what I was saying.
I'm essentially just restating my case here.
I would argue that it is,
and they argue that it is advantageous
because Tuk-Tuk in the rain is able to gather more,
12% more in fact, wet berries than he would have had
he not had that wrinkled skin and also potentially better traction on slippy rock surfaces with
those pruney toes.
And so, Tuk Tuk isn't falling and hitting his little head.
Okay, Mr. Smart Guy.
Why if it's just so advantageous to have, why aren't our fingers
pruney all the time?
Answer that.
Well, I know you're being coy because I have no idea, but they did ask those scientists
that same question and they said that it's not too clear, but their initial thought was,
here's the quote, our initial thoughts are that this could diminish the sensitivity in
our fingertips or could increase the risk
of damage through catching on objects.
So skin goes back to smooth fingertips when it's not needed because that, you know, isn't
so great to have full time.
Okay.
That's a reasonable explanation to that one.
Yeah.
So I guess, well, I'm not going to say that the case is settled because I just don't agree.
Hey man, I respect your opinion and you know what?
I don't really have one one way or the other.
I just think it's interesting.
Alright, that's great.
Well everybody chucks at hey man which means short stuff is out.
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