English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

In general, I have a high pain tolerance, but I also have chronic pain. Could I be feeling intense pain and interpreting it as only moderate pain because of my high pain tolerance?

2007-12-13 19:27:41 · 4 answers · asked by No One 3 in Health General Health Care Pain & Pain Management

4 answers

possible

they whole body is in pain, but the brain masks out what it considers normal. Then the brain alerts you when it feels a pain that is "extra".

Also your pain messages will not be "truthfull" unless your spinal chord branches are in top codition (meaning your spine bones). That is what chiropractors do., ensures the brain is getting correct messages.

2007-12-13 19:37:23 · answer #1 · answered by chezzrob 7 · 0 0

In this day, as my wife seems to think, you should learn to suffer. I'm afraid I don't believe in that. I've had surgery on my spine eight times now, 32 wires and 32 screws in it. I have eight cadaver bones along with eight of my own. I also have two gages in my lower back.
I have osteo-arthritis in the severe degenerative stages and, it's getting worse. I've been on many pain medications for 14 years now. They finally put in a Medtronic spinal pain stimulator to interrupt the pain, which it does very nicely.

I didn't;'t sleep more then two to three hours a night for many years, since the stimulator, I can sleep up to six and even seven hours a night, comfortable.

There's no reason, today, to suffer unless you want to. Why sit around and try and be comfortable in pain? why lay in bed at night, tossing and turning in pain or, walking the floors at night?

See your neurologist and ask him about the new Medtronic spinal pain stimulator. They had good results with damaged nerves in the legs and arms, other body pats too. Along with seizures and epileptic seizures.

2007-12-13 22:47:29 · answer #2 · answered by cowboydoc 7 · 0 0

My mother has a "high threshold" for pain as well, and she says that is the exact reason she has it: she interprets that pain as something else.

One of the tactics for surviving torture is to use the pain to focus on something else--a spot on the wall, a memory, your favourite song, anything to increase your tolerance level. Depending on how strong a person is, they can (amazingly) teach themselves to tolerate pain.

But from what I understand, it's ususally people who are both strong in body and spirit that have a high tolerance for pain.

Who knows? Maybe you're some kind of hero sent to protect us all. :)

2007-12-13 19:40:12 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

i'm going to respond to area of your question. the yank Pit Bull Terrier has an exceedingly intense threshold for soreness. That all started over a hundred and seventy years in the past of unique breeding to create a canines with a solid physique, amazing *grab and carry* jaw power, fearlessness and the skill to combat to the loss of lifestyles. One reason prong collars fail while used on the Pit Bulls that are authentic to their breeding. in case you ever look at photos of Pits being bred completely to combat in a hoop, they in lots of cases have on very thick leather-based buckle collars and heavy chains for restraint. The power plus the combat genetics those canines have, is the only way the breeders can save their canines from getting loose & tearing one yet another to products. i assume I would desire to easily make sparkling some issues.......an APBT which would be knowledgeable on delicate leaders & harnesses, with treats and *advantageous* basically, isn't a real occasion of the breed. particularly would not make the guy canines no longer worth of possession yet in simple terms identifies the canines as no longer having the authentic genetics. Do i actually would desire to describe that?

2016-10-11 06:29:55 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers