a painful ?

if one hits their thumb with a hammer and the ambient air temp., is warm, there doesn’t seem to be the same level of pain as there is when the ambient temp., is very cold. why?

                                     thank you for your replies.
                nadahappycamper

too old too boogie:(

I’ll just go do some experiments. BRB.

What was your control for this experiment?

I’ve seen a lot of smitten thumbs, all seasons, and I can’t say I’ve noticed this, but I also admit I have never considered it. I’m just overall more miserable when I am cold.

It’s OT but a carpenter did mention to me once (after having beaten his thumb to a pulp with a hammer blow) that he planned to hit it twice more right away because “you always end up hitting it a couple more times before it’s done healing so I’m gonna get them over with early.”

Related matter: why does ordinary contact seem to hurt in cold weather, sometimes? Dry skin?

Found this which may go some way to answering the OP;

I think that was the crux of the OP’s question. As anyone who’s played a contact sport in the cold knows, it hurts like hell if you try to tackle someone with freezing hands.

WikiAnswers offers this explanation:

Which seems to agree with the above quote; the nerves become more sensitive in colder temperatures.

This is interesting, because the premise of the OP is definitely correct in my experience-when I played baseball, getting hit by a pitch in cold weather was far more painful, especially on the hands. However, the exact opposite is true when taken to further extremes- extremely cold body parts are numb to pain. And ever been slapped on the back when sunburned?