I stuck my hand in water that was much hotter than I expected. I yanked it out and put it under cold water - and it still felt like it was burning. Why?
I had heard something once about how nerve endings sense only certain temps and warm + cold = hot or something odd like that.
Yes, a mixture of stimulus of cold water and warm water will have the sensation of extreme heat, but that probably wasn’t what happened in your case.
Either you really burned your hand badly and damage to tissues continued even after submerssion or else the water was too cold and was potentially damaging causing your pain to continue. After burns your skin becomes less sensitive to temperature, yet retains sensation of pain, causing the sensation of pain without cold.
quickly apply regular ole yellow mustard straight from the squeeze bottle. Makes it hurt a little worse for a few seconds, then it hurts no more. Also seems to give the least tissue damage. I did not believe it so I tried it the next time I had a smnall burn. No I do it on all burns.
If you’re out of mustard can you use ketchup or pickle relish instead? Should you use a hot dog bun as a dressing? Sorry, couldn’t resist.
Actually, I suspect the spices in the mustard that cause the initial burn have the same pain-deadening effect as oleoresin capsecum (sp?). I suspect it causes the pain-sensing nerve endings to fire so rapidly they eventually get “tired” and shut/slow down.