Scratching feels better on certain parts of your body

By MyHealthNewsDaily Staff
MyHealthNewsDaily

It feels oh so good to scratch an itch, but exactly how much pleasure we get from scratching depends on exactly where on the body the itch is, a new study says.

Digging your nails into an itch on your ankle feels better than doing the same to an itch on your arm, the study found.

The study could lead to a better understanding of itching, and how to relieve it for people who have skin disease s that cause it, said study researcher Dr. Gil Yosipovitch, a professor of dermatology at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center, in Winston-Salem, N.C.

Yosipovitch and colleagues induced itch on the ankles, forearms and backs of 18 study participants with tiny hairs from a tropical plant called the cowhage plant — a technique often used in studies on itching. The hairs were rubbed gently in a circular motion for 45 seconds within a small area of the skin, and removed once the skin started to itch. Participants rated how intense the itch was and how good it felt to scratch it, every 30 seconds for the next five minutes. Participants' rated their itches on a scale of 0 (no itch) to 10 (maximum unbearable itch).

The itching was most intense on the ankle and back, while the perception of itch and scratching relief were less pronounced on the forearm.

In addition, "the pleasurability of scratching the ankle appears to be longer lived compared to the other two sites," Yosipovitch said. For the back and forearm, scratching became less pleasurable as the itch diminished. But the pleasure of scratching remained high, even as the itch diminished.

The new findings may explain why patients with eczema and psoriasis commonly have itching on their back and ankle.

"We never understood why those areas were more affected, and now we better understand that itch in these areas is more intense and pleasurable to scratch," Yosipovitch said.

The reason for difference in itching pleasurable may lie in the way that sensory nerves are distributed throughout the body, the researchers say.

The findings may have implications for itch treatment.

"If we could translate this to a treatment that induces a pleasurable relief sensation without damaging the skin, we may be able to help itchy patients," he said.

The study was published online this month in the British Journal of Dermatology.

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Discuss this post

This is good to know. There's no point in scratching where it doesn't itch.

  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Wed Feb 1, 2012 7:51 PM EST

"Scratching feels better on certain parts of your body"

OMG, how did they know! I'm blushing.

  • 1 vote
Reply#2 - Wed Feb 1, 2012 11:06 PM EST

Yeah, but you can't scratch it there. It's more like a skin roll. =:P

    Reply#3 - Thu Feb 2, 2012 12:23 AM EST

    Hey researchers, check out itches on the back of the thigh as well.

      Reply#4 - Thu Feb 2, 2012 8:29 AM EST

      More news from the desk of Captain Obvious! Way to go, MSNBC reporters!

      Coming up next: SOME FOODS TASTE BETTER THAN OTHERS!

      How are these researchers coming up with money to do this crap when there are real needs in this world that need to be addressed?

        Reply#5 - Thu Feb 2, 2012 9:45 AM EST

        I'm all for research but I hope my tax money isn't being used for this. Also, I would like to know where I could apply for the job of "Reporter of Generally Useless Information" at MSNBC.

          Reply#6 - Thu Feb 2, 2012 11:21 AM EST

          A quick check of the by-line shows that you should apply at myhealthnewsdaily.com

          Apparently MSNBC outsources their useless info columns.

            #6.1 - Sun Feb 5, 2012 12:39 PM EST
            Reply

            life must be good when a person can get a grant to see how good it feels to scratch ones balls.

              Reply#7 - Sun Feb 5, 2012 10:24 PM EST

              The article points out that the scratching is more pleasurable where the itching is more intense. Duh. If the itching is more intense, the relief of it is then more pleasurable. It is not that it feels better to scratch in certain places, it is that the relief is greater.

                Reply#8 - Mon Feb 6, 2012 4:24 AM EST
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