Stuff You Should Know - How Itching Works
Episode Date: May 9, 2017It was only in the last few decades that science became aware that itches aren't just low-level pain. And in that time, the mystery of how we itch and why we scratch has gotten even more baffling. Le...arn 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
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or wherever you get your podcasts.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know
from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark.
There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant, and there's Jerry Rowland.
So this is Stuff You Should Know, scratching edition.
Yeah, this is one of many.
You remember when we did Yawning?
Well, that's the only one I can think of
where just researching something
makes you do the thing you're researching.
This definitely happened with this one.
Yeah, well, we ran across that in Poison Ivy and Scabies
for sure.
Oh, yeah.
And talked about some of this stuff,
but I think itch, we needed to scratch.
Yeah.
With this particular topic.
Well, I'm glad.
I've been wanting to do this one for a while.
Yeah, you did a video about this, right?
Yes.
A short video.
No, it was three, four hours long.
Okay.
If I remember correctly.
Does that mean we have to do this?
Do I have to be here for the next four hours?
Yeah, we have to just play the whole thing,
and then we'll talk about it for an hour after.
That sounds good.
Okay.
I think it was a brain stuff video, wasn't it?
Yeah, I watched it.
Did it scratch your itch?
Yeah, I watched it yesterday.
Oh, okay.
Nice work.
Thank you very much.
You're just like.
I finally arrived at what I was after.
Compliment.
Yeah.
No, it was great.
Thanks, man.
So I guess the point of all that is to say,
you guys are going,
you're going, right?
My videos are the best.
That you're going to scratch.
You're going to feel an itch.
Which is one of the great mysteries of itches.
It turns out, we only very, very recently
have started to get a handle on what itches are.
Yeah.
And there's still plenty of mysteries left to it.
Like for example, it's bizarre.
And there's really no evolutionary reason
as far as anyone can tell why just hearing about itches
or seeing someone else scratch can make you itch.
Right.
That's odd.
That's weird.
We're seeing a video of an ant crawling up
an arm will make you itch.
It will.
But I mean, think about it.
If somebody is sitting there,
you see a video of some schmoe
who's got his hand like near an oven
and he pulls it away really quick.
It doesn't hurt your hand.
It doesn't make you feel like your hand is burned.
This doesn't happen.
I don't even think that would excite
mirror neurons like a leg break would.
No.
You're just like, what a stupid idiot.
That's what it excites, yeah?
I hope that guy's hand just burns clean off.
That's what I think, right?
Right.
Yeah.
You sourced a couple of, well, we had our own article
on howstuffworks.com.
But you also sent this great New Yorker article written
by Dr. Atul Gawande.
One of the best names in writing today.
Yeah, that may be my new hotel name.
Well, you may be thronged by science fans,
because that guy's pretty well known.
Actually, I've never used it.
Ailey said a hotel that's dumb.
I don't even know if you can, can you?
I guess if you're a big shot, you can.
Yeah, but you have to be like, I'm not Brad Pitt.
I'm Atul Gawande.
Right.
But we'll get to some of the more interesting aspects
of that article later, specifically
a very specific patient that's quite distressing.
So calm down for now, Atul's mom.
But we'll get to it eventually.
He did include a couple of neat historical tidbits.
Like in 1660, and Germans are all over this thing
for some reason.
Yeah.
Researchers, they're all German.
They had the itch to explain the itch.
I guess so, the itch.
But there was a physician in 1660 named Samuel Hafenreffer.
Actually, that's my new hotel name.
That's a good one.
He kind of, well, he defined it by saying,
an itch is an unpleasant sensation that provokes
the desire to scratch.
Pretty simple, but right on the money.
It is, and actually it's so on the money
that anywhere you look in the medical literature,
whenever they define itch, word for word,
that's the definition they use.
The Hafenreffer?
Yeah, although poor Hafenreffer doesn't get credit
for it all the time, but that's the one.
The only expansion of that that I've seen
is that can occur anywhere on the body.
Which apparently is true.
I think Hafenreffer, he felt that was implied.
Right.
It's like, it goes without saying.
Yeah.
I'm scratching right now, by the way, it's started.
I don't know if I just noticed more,
because as I was doing it, I was thinking,
well, now I'm scratching, but I thought,
do I always scratch this much or itch this much?
Oh, I hadn't thought about that.
I'm pretty sure that I was,
I don't think I scratch as much as,
I don't know, do you raise a really good question?
Maybe we can get an intern to follow us around
and just record our scratching.
Right.
I'm surprised that that's not already a TV show, frankly.
Josh and Chuck, scratch.
Just being followed around.
Yeah.
Oh.
You know?
No one wants to see that.
Well, that's probably why it's not.
You're scratching.
See, that's what I'm saying.
I don't think I scratch this much.
I don't notice it.
All right, moving on to Dante's Inferno.
It was in Dante's Inferno,
the burning rage of fierce itching that nothing could relieve
is how falsifiers were punished.
Yeah, do you know what a falsifier is?
Us?
No, really, isn't that somebody who bears false witness
or somebody who falsifies a document or?
I don't know, is it just a fancy name for liar?
Maybe.
Oh, I thought you were gonna tell me.
You were just wondering.
Yeah, I don't know.
All right.
I don't know what Dante meant, but they're bad people.
Sure, apparently.
There's a special place in health for him, literally.
Well, I guess actually not literally.
Figuratively.
Sure.
Literally.
Oh, very nice.
So itching scientifically is known as puritis.
P-R-U-R-I-T-I-S.
It's one of those tough to pronounce things, for me at least.
And for, well, actually they still believe
that the evolution of the itch
was to help humans survive, basically,
because so many things that can kill you in nature
are things like mosquitoes or flies or spiders or fleas
that can have malaria or the plague
or any number of diseases attached
to their tiny little insect bodies.
So hey, human, you've got a mosquito on your neck
that could kill you.
You might wanna slap it or scratch.
Yeah, and that's still, as far as I know,
the evolutionary hypothesis for why we experience itching.
And it's not just us either.
Oh, you're scratching like crazy now.
It's found throughout the animal kingdom
from us to apparently fish have shown scratching behavior.
Yeah, that's crazy.
Fruit flies.
How does the fish scratch, you might ask?
It rubs up against rocks.
Yeah, it's kinda cute.
It is a little cute.
It's like, I remember my dad did like the,
who was the Baron Jungle Book?
Was that Baloo?
Yes.
He would do the Baloo where he would get up
against a tree or a wall.
And then I did it.
Probably because of that.
I'm sure that's where I got it
and realized that it works.
And I still do it every now and then.
Oh yeah?
Yeah, it looked kinda silly, but.
Do you sing while you do it?
Yeah, fair necessities.
Right.
That's still my favorite.
What else are you gonna sing?
Like Mambo number five?
I'm gonna start doing that actually.
You'd be like, think something's wrong with Chuck.
Yeah.
So like you said though, it was up until almost,
well it was in 1987, the mid to late 80s,
that another German, H.O. Handwerker,
and his gang of Tufts,
they started to do actual like research about it.
They were puzzled and wanted to solve it.
Right, because up to this point,
up to actually 1987, everyone thought that an itch
was just a low grade pain stimulus.
Yeah, I guess they were just.
Happy with that.
That's just what they thought it was.
And Handwerker said, you know what,
let's find out if this is actually true.
I'm tired of sitting around just assuming this is fine.
I'm a Handwerker, and he got to work with his hands
testing this, right?
So what he, I know that was like Jonathan Strickland level.
What he did was, this was just awful.
He introduced using like electrical stimulation,
I guess, he introduced histamine to skin cells, right?
And histamine is a natural, I don't know if it's a protein,
but it's a natural chemical, right?
That the body releases in response to certain stimuli,
say for example, like a mosquito bite or something,
and it triggers the inflammation and immune response
in that area, right?
So histamine is associated with itch,
and it had been for a very long time.
So this guy was using electrical stimulation
to introduce histamine in increasing amounts
in these poor study participants.
And it went from barely noticeable to,
this is a quote, the maximum imaginable itch.
And they never felt pain.
Yeah, like even though they ramped it up to 11,
no one ever said like, holy crap, that hurts.
They said, please, please, for the love of God, stop.
Let me out of this.
And Hanverker just cackled and cackled, right?
These men with like black leather gloves
were holding the participants down.
Yeah, they said this is not worth the five Deutsch marks
that I'm getting for this lousy study.
Yeah, that's nice, man.
That's sort of been pre-Euro, I think.
Oh yeah.
Even though the EU was around,
I don't think the Euro was around in 87, right?
No, no, because in the 90s?
I traveled to Europe in 1997,
and I was still on all that weird money.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, so it was a while after that.
So now scientists, I think this sort of introduced an itch
to the scientific community,
because after hundreds and hundreds of years,
Hanverker sort of disrupted the thought process
of the itch and the scratch.
And all of a sudden, scientists were like,
oh, well, maybe we should start looking into this.
Maybe we can actually isolate the nerve
and figure this thing out.
Yeah, because if it's not just a low-level pain sensation,
then that means it's its own thing.
And if it's its own thing, it probably has its own system,
and we need to know more about it.
So they got the study in it.
Yeah, I wonder if all of this was under the notion
that they were trying to cure itching.
I don't know, because from what I was reading,
and all of this was pretty recent stuff,
there is a real unmet medical need in dealing
and addressing chronic itch.
Because most people who go through life
just experiencing itch under normal circumstances, right?
Let's say you or me were like an itch.
Yeah, they suck for a second, and then it goes away.
Imagine it not going away ever.
Whether you're asleep or awake or swimming
or in outer space or doing whatever,
you're itching constantly.
Supposedly, it has as much of a pronounced effect
on a patient's life as chronic pain does.
It's constant, persistent, and agonizing.
And it's not being met or treated
because it's not understood.
So they're just now starting to get into pain or itch research.
I saw that somebody put it where pain research was
about 20 years ago.
So it's starting to really heat up,
but we're still just starting to understand it.
So I would think that they weren't looking to cure it.
I think it was just pointed out that there
was this whole branch of neuroscience
that was totally not understood.
So get to work, neurologists.
I wonder, I never really thought about it until just now,
but I wonder what happens when a performer or somebody
like that is in the public eye or on TV or on stage
or like the president giving a address,
like what do they do if they have poison ivy
or some other kind of contact dermatitis?
Have you ever thought about that?
What if Lin-Manuel Miranda has a really bad case of point?
I guess they can get an understudy in that case.
But you can't have an understudy as president.
No. Which is too bad.
You just go out there with your hands bandaged up,
just holding them up.
Like how do you fight that on camera or like a news anchor
when they're just like, oh my God, I'm dying.
I don't know.
I guess a news anchor can tape things,
but I'm talking about live.
What does Tom Petty do for God's sakes?
Tom Petty grins and bears it.
He had a hard scrabble childhood.
He sure did.
Prepared him for that.
I'm going to see him tomorrow night.
Oh yeah.
Nice.
Tom, I said about that.
We're waiting for coffee.
He's not performing.
Anyway, I was just curious about that.
Well, it's a good question.
Thanks.
Do you remember when Costas had red eye at the Olympics
and he was so dedicated to being the commentator
of the anchor for the Olympics?
They finally were like, you have to stop.
And no one can look at you anymore.
People are writing in.
You're disgusting, though.
She was gross.
One thing that made me think of that is I had recently,
and you can still kind of see it on my forearm, the scars,
but I did a cement job.
I was building this fence, putting in a gate at my house.
And Scotty, you know Scotty, he and I built, huh?
Pippin.
Scotty Pippin.
He and I built this thing together
and we sank these huge posts for this gate.
And I didn't know that cement could cause contact dermatitis
or even burns.
Never knew this.
And we were, it was kind of a tight spot
and we couldn't get shovels in there in the hole.
So we were literally mixing this stuff,
like up to our elbows with our arms.
And I was like, this kind of feels good.
I even said, like oatmeal or something.
And then two days later, my right arm was just covered
in the nastiest dermatitis I've ever seen.
Wow.
And then he got it.
Yeah, still kind of hanging around.
So I went and got a prescription for steroids,
which made me a little crazy for a week and a half.
Okay.
Do you trash the gate and have to start over?
No.
Lord rage.
I think I was probably not the best husband though.
I see.
Over that time period.
Yeah.
Judging from Emily saying, hey, you're real a-hole.
Get off the steroids.
Gotcha.
Get off the juice.
And I was like, shut up.
Watch this, watch me hit this Homer.
So long story short, I experienced this recently
and it was awful and I can't imagine like shooting
a TV show or something.
Or like doing anything or performing live.
Yeah.
Like I would have to address it.
Cause I would scratch and smack it was what I usually do.
That's what you're supposed to do.
Not scratch.
We'll just cut to the chase here.
This is why everyone's listening.
How do you scratch a niche correctly?
You rub it.
Yeah, I didn't do.
I did, you know, it really did.
It was the, we have a handheld implement in the shower
along with the regular shower head.
Okay. Yeah.
And put that sucker on the tightest, hardest,
most penetrating flow and just put that hot water on it, man.
And that was like, I think I spent half of my days
in the shower over that week and a half.
Were you biting down like a broomstick
while you were doing that?
No, it felt so good, man.
I was just like, I couldn't get enough of it.
And then the cortisone and all that junk too.
So, well, actually, we'll talk about this.
We'll talk about this because you're raising
some great points here.
Well, I just kind of, they're ruining the spoiler.
No, no, this is good stuff.
We're going to analyze what was going on with your arm
after this break.
How about that?
Sounds good.
["Suggestion No." by David Lasher and Christine Taylor
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor
stars of the co-classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
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We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
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We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
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It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars, friends,
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Listen to, Hey Dude, the 90s called on the iHeart radio
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There is like a Joshua shock.
So Chuck, you had contact dermatitis, right?
I thought it was poison ivy, because that area has some poison
ivy.
But each of us, Scotty and I, had it just on the arm
that we sunk and cement.
And then we researched and found out that could happen.
Yeah.
So lesson learned on that.
Yeah.
So what happened was, something in the cement,
and I'm not sure what it was, reacted chemically
with the mast cells in your skin,
and histamine was released, right?
Apparently.
And so the histamine sent a signal
through specialized nerve cells called C-fibers.
Yeah, which C-fibers aren't just limited to itching.
I think only about 5% handle that.
And most of the rest are for pain.
Right, right.
So they use the same type of neural pathway as pain.
But for itch, basically it's just like, no, these are just
for itches only.
And it sent a signal through your spinal column.
And in your spinal column, it released a neurotransmitter
called gastrin-releasing peptide receptor.
And so at the skin, the histamine
would have released a neurotransmitter called what?
Natrauretic polypeptide B.
OK, so that says itch signal coming your way
along those C-fibers.
Yes.
OK, it makes it to the spinal column.
And I guess in about 2007, they found
that there's another neurotransmitter in the spine
that I guess accepts the NPPB.
The invitation.
And says, I'm going to transfer this along up to the brain.
That's gastrin-releasing peptide receptor.
That shoots up to the brain.
And it starts this cascade of activity.
Because after Handwerker said, hey, itchings its own thing,
these other researchers went to town
and traced and figured out that there
were specific types of itch receptors that
were dedicated just to itches.
More Germans.
More Germans.
And Swedes.
Couple of Swedes, but mostly Germans.
Just for good measure.
Yeah.
And what they found eventually from tracing this pathway,
they were able to follow it into the Wonder Machine.
And apparently, they made some people itch
and would not let them scratch it.
And then they had them lay down in an MRI.
And they took a brain scan.
And they found that there's this whole galaxy of stuff
going on in your brain that combined
is the itch sensation.
Yeah, it was pretty interesting, too.
There's a signature pattern in the brain when you get an itch.
And a few specific areas light up.
One is a cortex.
And it all makes sense when you put it together.
Right.
The cortex, in this case, just sort of geolocates where
on your body you're getting that sensation.
Right.
So that helps.
It's like left elbow.
Yeah, or in my case, from right elbow to wrist.
Right.
And then a little bit in other places, but not too bad.
That was the main area.
Is this your cortex still saying this?
Yeah, it was a very complex conversation going on.
And then the region, I thought this was interesting,
the region that governs emotional response.
So basically, this is your brain saying, I don't like this.
This makes me feel bad.
Yeah, it's the worst thing ever.
Do something.
And then finally, the limbic and motor areas.
And I thought this was the most interesting.
Those areas process irresistible urges,
the same ones that say, I want to smoke crack
or I want to eat too much cake says,
you have an itch that is unbearable
and you need to scratch it.
Right.
And maybe go smoke some crack and eat some cake
while you're at it.
Because that'll help.
So I just thought that was all very super interesting
when you combine that pattern.
Yeah, that's an itch.
And then followed by the irresistible urge
to scratch it, which apparently research has shown,
those two do not happen independently.
They're part of a cycle.
Yes.
There is something called the itch-scratch cycle.
And so you have an irresistible urge to scratch the itch.
It's weird if you think about it.
On the one hand, it makes sense where you sense
that there's a really hot heat source
that your hand is really close to.
So you have an irresistible urge to pull it back.
But it doesn't feel like an urge.
It almost feels like an involuntary reflex.
Yeah, I think it's that quick.
A scratch is almost like, I'm going to kill this itch.
I can't wait to scratch it.
Like you're almost exacting revenge on the itch
for itching you, right?
So a scratch is an irresistible urge
where it's like pulling your hand back from a hot source
or something is like an involuntary reflex.
It just feels different.
Like a scratch is its own thing.
Well, it is.
You know, they kind of found that out.
And Dr. Gawande pointed out something interesting too
that I never thought about is that you can have
like that short collar rubs against your neck all day.
And you might never notice it.
But if there's like one little string
that's just poking one little area,
that might trigger an itch.
Right.
And so you would think that, you know,
itch receptors are super finely tuned
and they cover just this one tiny like micron of skin.
As a matter of fact, no, apparently an itch receptor
can sense itch stimuli like three inches away from it.
It's crazy.
Yeah.
So they're really sensitive.
Yeah.
Whereas pain receptors are that specific.
Right.
Down to like, you know, millimeters.
Yeah.
And the other thing they found out too is that
not only can they sense it from a few inches away,
but it's a very slow acting thing.
Right.
Which as opposed to like heat on the hand,
like a candle on your hand,
almost a candle in the wind.
Mm-hmm.
That's super fast,
but that explains why an itch like is kind of slow to come
and then slow to resolve by scratching.
Yeah.
It's not like you scratch it.
You're like, oh, it's all better now.
Yeah.
It helps a little bit.
So the itching is a, it's a good strategy
if you think about say you're,
there's a mosquito on you
and that's what's making you itch.
When you go to scratch it,
you're getting rid of the mosquito,
maybe even smushed it or something like that.
The problem's taken care of.
The issue is that itch scratch cycle
eventually becomes a vicious cycle
because when you scratch,
this is what they think is going on.
This is another mystery with itches.
We don't understand how scratching alleviates an itch.
Right.
Or why we scratch really, right?
What they think the current hypothesis
is that when you scratch an itch,
you're stimulating other receptors in the area
that aren't itch receptors.
Yeah. So I got that,
but what does that do to sort of like,
say, hey, body, don't worry about that for a minute.
I think so.
Like a pain receptor is now active.
Right. Exactly.
It's sending feedback to the brain saying
it's being taken care of.
You can settle down with the itch.
Gotcha.
I think the problem is,
is that neurologically or neurochemically,
when you scratch an itch,
you're activating those pain receptors in the area,
pain pressure, that kind of thing,
you're causing serotonin to be released,
natural pain reliever, right?
Yeah.
Or at least mood enhancer.
And what they found is that serotonin,
among other neurochemicals,
actually exacerbates the itch sensation.
So your itch not only comes back, it gets worse.
So you go to scratch it again
and then the same thing happens over and over again.
That's the itch scratch cycle,
which it's not the best cycle around.
No.
You can make a better cycle.
It's not a bad band name.
Yeah.
It's okay.
A little too cute.
Maybe Prague folk Prague.
Well, they'd have to be German probably.
German folk Prague.
Okay.
Another interesting thing they learned too,
was that, I guess we're kind of jumping around,
but who cares, right?
If you scratch, you don't have to scratch
the point of the itch to relieve it apparently.
Right.
Like if you have, I had that itch on my right forearm,
and I could scratch maybe,
it doesn't have to be the left forearm,
so it's not like you have to mirror it.
But I could scratch like my neck,
and apparently that might help relieve it.
Yeah, I tried it, it didn't work for me.
No.
No.
But I think the reason why there's,
that's it's possible that it could have that effect is,
supposedly scratching also activates like your pleasure
center.
Yeah, you bet it does.
But there's different places where you're scratching
on your body have different amounts of pleasure
associated with them.
Did you know that?
I mean, I guess so, but.
Yeah, interesting.
Well, yeah, but I mean, think about it.
It's like if you scratch your clavicle,
who cares?
It's nothing, right?
But then you scratch like your head, right?
Above and behind your ear.
It's great.
Well, and I think they did find that like,
your back and your ankles, supposedly,
are some of the most rewarding places to scratch.
Exactly.
And I don't know, I've never really thought about
the ankles, but my mom would give me back scratches
when I was a kid.
That's nice.
And it was always like one of my favorite things ever.
Sure.
And so, I don't get those anymore.
Now that I'm a grown up, because that's gross.
You know, I'm scratching my back, I'm 46 years old.
Lay down.
But yeah, it was like, I think I prefer to back scratch
to a back rub even.
Oh yeah.
When I was younger, but now massage is probably way better.
Sure.
But if a masseuse could include a little back scratch
in there, get ready for a huge tip for me.
Yeah, I guess so.
Is that, what, is that sexual?
I think it crosses a line once they're potentially
clawing away skin cells.
I think that's no longer in the masseuse range
or masseur range.
Yeah, I get that.
Once skin cells are involved.
You know.
Under the nails.
Sure.
Then you're a murder suspect.
Right, exactly.
All right, well, should we take another break?
Yeah.
And talk a little bit about one of the most
distressing articles I've ever read.
Mm-hmm.
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Lance, I've been taught to love and shock.
All right, so we've referenced this article
from the New Yorker from Dr. Atul Gawande.
And he talked a lot about itching
and just had good information on the science of it all.
Well, that's what he does.
But most of the article was focused on a patient,
a woman in Massachusetts that they named M for the article.
Just M.
The letter M, in other words, you know, she's anonymous.
And I think she was anonymous
because she kind of had a rough go after her divorce.
She ended up getting HIV from getting on heroin,
kind of spun out, it seems like,
but then got her life back by all accounts,
but ended up getting shingles
as a result of HIV complications.
And the shingles went away,
but the itching did not, to say the least.
Yeah, I think the itching came after the shingles even.
And at first, her physicians were like,
well, I mean, you must have damaged some nerves in there.
So, TS for you, I guess.
And then eventually, after treating it
like all these different ways,
and it's still being scratching,
they said, okay, you're crazy, how about that?
Right.
And she said, well, whatever, I still have this itch,
do whatever you need to to treat it
because I'm literally scratching this itch in my sleep.
It was on her scalp, wasn't it?
Yeah, it was on her head
and she kind of managed to control it during the day,
but like you said at night, she couldn't control it
to the point where I think she was like restrained
in her sleep.
That came after.
Oh, okay.
After they realized it's a problem
because your brain is oozing out of your head.
Yeah.
Can you believe that?
She scratched her scalp so much
that she scratched through her skull
and she went into her doctor one day and said,
they've got like this green fluid coming down
and then apparently-
The doctor fainted.
The doctor didn't even say anything.
He was just, she or she was like, excuse me,
went and called an ambulance and came back and said,
please lay down and don't talk or move or do anything else.
And they finally told her after she was at the ER,
you scratched through to your brain.
Like that's your brain you're touching right now.
The doctor was like, very interesting.
Just give me a second here.
I am pleased to see that.
Oh my God.
Well, they gathered up all the other doctors
and nurses was like-
Sure.
Yeah, you gotta come see this.
She said also in this article,
she said that she had a,
what do they call, a roommate.
Okay, a roommate.
Yeah.
So she had a roommate while she was,
like they treated it, gave her a skin graft
and then she scratched away the skin graft.
Oh man.
And then they finally were like,
okay, you're going to an asylum.
And she's like, do they even call it that anymore?
And they're like, just shut up.
And they put her in this asylum
and restrained her, like you said, while she was sleeping.
And she had a roommate in there.
She said in the article, she heard didn't survive.
He had scratched through his carotid artery
and died, blood death.
Yeah.
So they never really got to the bottom of this.
She finally got a doctor.
Like the doctors were like,
it's something that had to do with the shingles.
This is what we think happens at our doctors.
That the nerve endings around the area
where she had shingles were so devastated by the shingles
that there were just a couple of nerve endings left.
And it just so happened that they were itch receptors.
Oh.
Itch, yeah, itch receptors.
Bad luck.
And that those were like really exacerbated
by the fact that there was no other competing sensations.
Oh.
Ipso facto, there's your problem, right?
So they said, well, let's,
we'll just cut the main nerve to your face.
And that should solve the problem.
They cut the main nerve to her face.
And she said, thanks a lot.
Yeah.
And then the itch came back.
And she's like, you have to be kidding me.
So finally she met a doctor who said,
I don't think it's your receptors
or the nerve transmission.
I think it's your brain, not psychologically.
I don't think it's a psychosis.
I think there's that the actual itch signaling,
your brain is being set off without any stimulation
or transmission going on.
And apparently she was right.
But then they were like, good luck treating that.
Right.
Yeah.
I didn't see much followup on this.
I did read one article that a followup with Dr. Gawande,
because there were a lot of skeptics
after that article came out that said,
it's impossible with your fingernail.
She said she didn't use an implement.
It's not like she got out of metal file
to scratch through your skull.
And he said that his theory was that bacteria,
it became infected, it had eaten it away
such that the skull became soft.
Turned it to mush.
Yeah.
Yick.
And then people also said, you know,
you don't have men and women in the same room
in hospitals or asylums, that's false.
And he said that it was like the room next door.
And quit being pedantic.
Yeah, really.
Man, I think people just didn't believe it.
So all these folks wrote into the New Yorker.
So all these coastal elites said no way.
They said a tool, a tool, come on.
So the idea though that even if this woman was hypothetical,
I think tool Gawande is pretty upstanding cat.
I didn't make this up.
But even if, say she was hypothetical,
her problem, what the doctors initially thought it was,
was that she had a neuropathic itch,
type of chronic itch.
But then the doctor who apparently figured it all out
said, no, no, no, it's a neurogenic itch,
another type of chronic itch.
And it has to do with whether it's the brain going off
or the nerve transmissions going off.
Either way, you don't actually have an itch,
although you're experiencing the itch sensation.
Well, and they also then said at some point
she had a psychogenic itch.
Right.
So basically covered three out of the four kinds of itches,
the last one being, man, such a hard time,
pre-receptive, and that's what you get from a mosquito bite,
or if you have a skin disorder like eczema or something.
So they basically ruled out the most common one,
and at various stages said, no, you've got this other one
for the other three.
Right, finally.
And then again, they said, there's really
nothing we can do to treat it.
The one that they've got down pretty well is pre-receptive.
We've got all sorts of stuff to treat that,
because that's basically histamine
is being released and your skin is itching.
So you can treat histamines with antihistamines.
You can reduce that response, and then your itch will go away.
Well, I took a benadryl at night,
and they also make this benadryl spray,
a topical spray that really helps.
So between that and cortisone and then the benadryl at night,
I did OK in those awesome showers.
So the pre-receptive itch, we've got treatment for it,
basically.
The other three, you're in trouble, it turns out.
As far as it stands right now, maybe five or 10 years
from now, there'll be something.
Apparently, there is a lot of movement
right now on treating this stuff.
But they're having to figure out how
to block some really otherwise important chemicals
in the body, like that NPPB, right?
Yeah, that one, what does it can help
can regulate your blood pressure as well?
Right, so they can't.
You can't just switch that off.
Right, yeah.
Just turn off the gene that produces that.
You won't itch, but you might die early.
Right.
Not worth it.
The one that really, I mean, they're all sad,
but the psychogenic, when you have a mental illness where
you feel like you have parasites and bugs on your skin.
You remember our morgolons disease?
Yeah.
How did you set it more gallons, right?
And I said morgolons?
I can't remember, I know that I set it the way
everyone else says it, though.
That's all I remember.
Morgolons.
That's right, that's how I set it.
Man, but all this stuff, it just had so much empathy for M.
Yeah.
And wanted to follow up so bad to see how she was doing.
You know?
Yeah.
And if she kept scratching holes in her skull.
I don't know.
Jeez.
So there's, I read another article called
Accidental Therapists.
It's by a guy named Eric Brudman,
and it was published on a website called STAT.
And it's all about delusional parasitosis,
but how it's treated sometimes by entomologists.
You know, like those extension services at universities?
Yeah.
Here in the US, state universities
have what are called extension services,
where a scientist will basically be there for the public
to come talk to about whatever.
Usually it's like household stuff, or farm stuff,
something like that.
And apparently entomologists frequently
are approached with people who are like,
I've got these bugs crawling all over me.
Here's a sample of them.
And it turns out it's like carpet fiber or something
like that.
And these people just can't stop itching or whatever.
But it turns out they have a delusion.
They don't actually have parasites.
My question is, is that our understanding of it now?
And in five or 10 years, we're going
to know that they had neurogenic itches.
And we just treated them like they were crazy,
even though they weren't.
And it's going to be like a real blemish
on the history of neuroscience.
Or will this idea of psychogenic itches hold up?
I wonder.
Did you ever see the Todd Haynes movie Safe with Julianne
Moore?
No.
It was one of his first movies after the Karen Carpenter
thing he did that wasn't like.
I mean, it was a real movie, but it wasn't released.
But Safe was very disturbing.
It was about a woman who kind of slowly drifted into madness
from believing that the world was poisoning her.
Wow.
And like household chemicals and everything.
And it kind of started slow.
And eventually, she ended up at this kind of safe camp
for people like her.
Right.
Very distressing movie.
And one of her first movies, too.
I'll have to check it out.
Yeah, it's really good.
Oh, it's old?
Yeah, it was early 90s, I think.
I know you're talking about.
No, it's called The Road to Wellville.
Is that what you mean?
No, it's called Safe.
OK, I'll check it out.
Yeah, it's good.
Very distressing.
I'm trying to think of anything.
And that wasn't necessarily itching,
but it was just like that psychogenic thing of like,
I think everything in my house is killing me.
Yeah, I mean, have you ever like stopped and thought
about something and thought, there's the path to madness
right there.
I'm staring down it right now.
I should probably not keep thinking about this.
I don't really get like that.
Oh, no.
No, I'm very easily kind of led on to the next shiny thing.
I guess.
Oh, like a bird.
Yeah, basically.
That's probably for the best.
It is.
It has its drawbacks, though.
What else you got?
Well, one thing it says in here is that having someone else
scratch your itch apparently does not do the trick.
So you have to scratch your own itch.
Yeah, I mean, somebody can.
Like, obviously, like, you know, if you're like, a little left,
a little left, up, up, up.
Yeah, see, I don't really agree with that.
Oh, man.
Not you, them saying.
Oh, right.
Like, I think it definitely helps.
I think what they're saying is it doesn't have quite
the same relieving properties as if you do it yourself.
Oh, yeah.
And if you could reach that area of your back,
it would be better than that.
Yeah, I guess so.
I got a pretty good back scratcher now, though.
Oh, yeah.
What's it made of bamboo?
No, it's metal.
But it's telescoping, so it's not, you know, two feet long.
Gotcha.
But it can be.
But it's metal?
Yeah, it looks like a bear claw, not the pastry,
but a real bear claw, which actually looks like the pastry.
Yeah, I guess it does.
That's why they call it that.
I never thought about that.
Why'd you think that was called that?
I'm just kidding.
I actually should call it a bear paw.
It looks more like a bear paw than a bear paw.
I guess it does.
I'm going to try and bring that around.
Unless you get somebody who really goes the extra mile
and puts almonds on the tips to make it look like the claw.
Yes.
And not just haphazardly scattered about the bear paw.
Exactly.
That's the difference between a baker who loves their job
and one who's just in it for the money.
Yeah.
A couple more things, Charles.
Like we said, there's still plenty of mysteries around itches.
Why, say, does a feather tickle sometimes but itch other times?
Big question.
They don't know.
Right.
But I'd like to know.
Well, maybe the Germans will get active on this again.
Yeah.
They're the only ones who can solve it.
Though only the Germans can save us.
You got anything else?
No, I don't.
I don't either.
Itching.
Nice work.
Thanks, man.
Same to you.
Thank you, and you haven't scratched in a while, so.
No, I've actually been scratching the same spot
and it's starting to get a little tender, so I'm stopping.
Man, there's nothing worse than a movie.
And I feel like I've seen this a few times in movies
where someone is compulsively scratching
until it becomes a sore, and then they're scratching it.
It's just like, ugh, I can't watch that.
Through their brain?
Well, yeah.
So I guess the moral of this one is, what would Tom Petty do?
I'll ask him tomorrow.
If you want to know more about itching
or what Tom Petty would do, you can type those words
in the search bar at house2forks.com.
And since I said search bar, it's time for Listener Mail.
I'm going to call this one of the many emails we got
on the swearing episode.
Do you notice that?
People really seem to like that one.
Yeah, they do.
A lot of response.
Mostly from fellow potty mouths, which were very filthy
emails, too, which were great.
And I responded in turn by cursing at them in my replies,
which I hope they enjoyed.
In all caps?
No.
I didn't want to be too aggressive.
So this is from Emily Allen.
Hey, guys, longtime listener.
First time writing in.
Writing about swearing, I should start by saying that it's
funny I'm writing about this episode because I almost never
curse.
And when I do, it's normally not a very offensive swear.
However, your intro made me think of something interesting
I wanted to share.
You talked about how you really censor yourself during
recording in order to keep your show family friendly, and
got me thinking about how our jobs really shape our
vocabulary, how we express ourselves.
I noticed a major change in the way I speak since
becoming a teacher.
Primarily teach kindergarten to second grade students.
And I found this really changed the way I express myself.
For example, I try to avoid even saying things are dumb or
stupid around kids.
I'll often say, well, isn't that silly instead?
This works in the classroom, but I often get laughs from
friends and family when I refer to a situation as silly, like
a disagreement with a colleague or something a
politician does.
There are other expressions I use with kids that often slip
into regular conversation as well.
The most embarrassing, when I'm out and excuse myself to go
potty, that always gets a laugh.
Anyway, I just wanted to share and thank you for all the
great work you do.
I learned so much from listening each week, and I'm
always excited to see the new episode offerings every
Tuesday and Thursday.
That is from Emily Allen.
Thank you, Ms. Allen.
Very silly.
That was a very nice email.
If you want to get in touch with us like Ms. Allen did,
you can tweet to us at S-Y-S-K podcast, or Josh M.
Clark.
You can hang out with us on facebook.com, stuff you
should know, or slash Charles W. Chuck Bryant.
You can send us an email at stuffpodcast.howstuffworks.com.
And as always, join us at our home on the web,
stuffyoushouldknow.com.
For more on this and thousands of other topics, visit
howstuffworks.com.
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 slipdresses and choker
necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
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We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
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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,
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If you do, you've come to the right place,
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