ELI5; Why is cramp so painful?

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Pretty much that! – Muscles going haywire is for some reason the most unimaginable pain I’ve had. Why’s that?

In: Biology

5 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

ELY5: it’s an involuntary response (no active brain input) that causes muscles to contract wayyy too tightly and then the nerves in your leg or arm or wherever send a message to your brain that something is wrong

Anonymous 0 Comments

Get checked by a doctor. Could be many reasons. Some including blood clots – or could just be be lack of minerals. Never the less it sounds like you need to get proper advice not Internet advice.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Pain receptors are the body’s way of signalling to the brain that something is wrong. When you have muscle cramps, the muscles tighten too much and the pain receptors go haywire.

Anonymous 0 Comments

You can get cramps in voluntary muscles like the calf, the pain causes you to stop and attend to the issue rather than making the situation worse by trying to walk on it. https://youtu.be/aieh2yn4Auw

Anonymous 0 Comments

The short answer: Ischemia

Muscle cramps (or spasms) are involuntary muscle contractions. The muscle (or parts of it) contracts way too tightly, resulting in inadequate blood supply to the muscle. This results in not enough oxygen being delivered to the muscle cells (ischemia). This lowers the pH in the area, causing a release of several substances from the cells which stimulate pain receptors.

Fortunately, muscle cells can survive ischemia for quote long (several hours) in contrast to brain tissue for instance (few minutes).

Edit: So as to your question why muscle cramps are so particularly painful, it’s because ischemic pain are some of the most intense (which from an evolutionary standpoint makes sense, since ischemia leads to irreversible damage of not relieved fast enough). A comparison is a heart attack/blood clot in vessels supplying the heart. This also leads to ischemia, and hurts like hell.
There are exceptions though, like a stroke where you have ischemia of an area in the brain. But there are no pain receptors inside the brain, so you don’t feel the ischemia here, even though irreversible brain damage occurs after a few minutes.