Eli5 : Why does it burn when water touches an open wound?

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Eli5 : Why does it burn when water touches an open wound?

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5 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Your body has a higher salt content than plain water. This is why doctors use a saline solution to flush out a wound.

Also, you are dealing with raw nerves, but I have had wounds flushed out with saline and it didn’t hurt.

Anonymous 0 Comments

When water touches an open wound it can cause it to burn because when water touches the wound it can wash away some of the natural oils and protective barriers that usually keep germs out. This can make the wound vulnerable to germs and other harmful substances, and if these germs get inside the wound it can cause it to burn from the inside out.

Anonymous 0 Comments

When water touches an open wound it causes a burning sensation because the wound is exposed to the water’s pH level which is slightly acidic. The acidic pH level of water can cause irritation to the wound, which can cause the burning sensation. Additionally, the open wound may already be inflamed, making it more sensitive and more likely to react to the pH level of the water.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Tap water in the UK contains bleach and fluoride, it also doesn’t match the salt content of your bodily fluids

Anonymous 0 Comments

When you are injured, your cells send out a bunch of chemical signals that cause inflammation. Some of these signals dilate your blood vessels so you get more resources to fix the injury. Other signals call more immune cells over to protect against infection.

One of the signals sent out makes all of the pain-sensing nerve cells more sensitive. For example, if you push on your skin a little bit it probably doesn’t hurt. If you push a bit harder it can start to hurt a little. The nerves that sense pain caused by pressure aren’t sensitive enough to go off from just a little bit of pressure – which is good. If you get injured, you will notice that just a little bit of pressure in that area causes pain, because those nerves are made more sensitive.

This is on purpose, so that you will protect an injured area, giving it time to heal. Pain is the body’s way of warning you and protecting you.

Because all of your pain-sensing nerves are more sensitive, water will set a lot of them off when it normally wouldn’t. You also have nerves that are buried in your skin so that they *only* go off when a cut is deep enough to expose them, which the water will hit and set off.

You’ll notice that cold or hot water probably hurts more, because you also have nerves that sense dangerous cold or heat, which are made more sensitive.

So, you’ve got a lot of stimuli affecting a very sensitive area.