why is it that when you stub your toe against something, for a second it feels like the pain is going away before it actually sets in?

586 views

why is it that when you stub your toe against something, for a second it feels like the pain is going away before it actually sets in?

In: Biology

Anonymous 0 Comments

You have multiple types of sensory neurons that contribute to pain response, and they respond to different inputs and transmit at different rates. The initial impact triggers a rapid signal to your brain, which subsides as the other sensory neurons begin generating pain signals.

You are viewing 1 out of 1 answers, click here to view all answers.