Why Do We Itch?

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The American poet Ogden Nash said, “Happiness is having a scratch for every itch.”

But while scratching can feel pretty good, we all know what happens next.

When considering scratching an itch, it may be better to follow the old Yiddish proverb:

“A quarrel is like an itch; the more you scratch, the more it itches.”

There are plenty of things that cause that irritating, unpleasant, itchy sensation.

But why do we itch in the first place?

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The itch sensation, also known as pruritus, is not the most pleasant thing, but it evolved

for a good reason.

Stretched out, your skin covers about 20 square feet, the biggest organ you have.

Your other organs on the inside are protected by your immune system, but, skin is your first

line of defense, the wall that guards the human realm, exposed to the elements, and

it’s got a unique way to deal with different types of threats.

Where there’s an itch, there’s a desire to scratch, often an unconscious desire.

This reflex likely prompted our outdoor-dwelling ancestors to remove parasitic threats and

other irritating things like thorns and allergens.

And much like yawning, being itchy is thought to be contagious, as some of you may be noticing

right about now.

We are social animals, dcB.B.so watching some infested tribe mate get their scratch on could

have given us a head start to get rid of those parasites.

So, we know the purpose of itch.

But what happens inside our bodies that makes it feel different from other sensationsffevv

like pressure or heat?

Turns out, we don’t know all the pieces to the itch puzzle yet.

Up until about a decade ago scientists thought itch was just a dialed down, less intense

version of pain.

When something makes contact with our skin, nerve endings in the epidermisthe outermost

layer of our skinrelay this information through electrical and chemical messages,

up the spine and to the brain.

Different stimuli activate different nerve pathways and cause different sensations in

our brains.

Light touch might feel nice.

A punch to the face will probably hurt.

We now know that there’s special itch-specific circuitry in our nervous systems, involving

its own chemicals and cells.

And we share one universal response to itching: scratching.

And boy does it feel good.

But, why?

Scratching, is technically a form of pain.

I mean, the name of a small wound that breaks the skin *is* a* scratch.

Scratching causes a low-level pain signal to the brain that masks and overrides the

itch signal, which is why slapping, pinching, and pressing itchy regions also gives you

relief.

Remember that the next time your mom tells you not to scratch.

Your brain responds to pain by triggering the release of chemicals at the irritated

site, which tunes down the painful sensation.

One of those relief-providing chemicals is serotonin, a neurotransmitter.

But that serotonin also makes it easier for the itch signal to be re-triggered again.

So, the itch nerves fire again and you get even itchier!

Scientists call this constant loop of itching and scratching theitch-scratch cycle”–very

cleverand it can be maddening.

In extreme cases, damage to itch-sensing nerves can cause itching without an actual stimulus,

and this is the kind of itch that scratching can’t help.

People who have recovered from shingles, a virus infection that affects your nervous

system, can be left with an unexplainable, never-ending itch once the rash recedes.

One women had such an itchy scalp after healing from shingles that she scratched straight

through to her brain.

So, what can the rest of us do to avoid scratching a`n itch?

Itchy ailments have been documented throughout history, and humans have found some pretty

clever ways to find relief.

The Greeks and Romans had mineral baths and animal fat.

The Persians used silver.

Menthol soothed itchy skin in ancient China, and camphor, a chemical from Evergreen trees

historically used to make explosives, has been soothing itchy skin since the 13th century.

Today we also have anesthetics, which numb the skin of all feeling, counterirritants

like capsaicin, extracted from chili peppers, and antihistamines and steroid creams, just

to name a few.

But since itchiness can be caused by so many things there isn’t a one-size-fits all remedy.

Luckily, with so many treatments to choose from, at least you don’t have to start from

scratch.

If youre itchy, just remember: Unlike beauty, itch doesn’t run only skin deep.

It’s a sensation that reaches from the epidermis to the brain.

The origins of that itch youre feeling right now extend way back on the evolutionary

tree, and weve only scratched the surface of knowing

how it all works.

Stay Curious.