If you have lower leg pain and skin that is sensitive to touch you need to get this checked out by a doctor. You likely have some sort of nerve damage or irritation.
Your cat's lower back may be sensitive to touch due to pain or discomfort caused by an injury, arthritis, muscle strain, skin irritation, or an underlying medical condition. It is important to have your cat examined by a veterinarian to determine the cause and proper treatment.
no it is not cause surgeons can touch the brain and ask patients questions when their wide-awake while they are getting brain surgery!
Touch ... the number of receptor cells.
If your tongue is the most sensitive to touch, you are likely to be less sensitive in areas where the skin is thicker, such as the soles of your feet or palms of your hands. These areas have a higher concentration of calloused skin, which provides more protection and reduces sensitivity to touch.
All vertebrates have general sensors in their skin for touch, pressure, and pain. These are called
Bones themselves do not have pain receptors, so they are not typically sensitive to pain. However, the tissues surrounding bones, such as muscles, ligaments, and tendons, can be sensitive and cause pain if injured or damaged.
The most sensitive part of the leg is typically the shin area, as it is composed of numerous nerves close to the surface of the skin. These nerves are easily stimulated, making this area more sensitive to touch and pain compared to other parts of the leg.
The 5 sensations are: - Skinny - Skin-like - Skinsensation - Sensaskin - Ya mum Fhuckfhuckfhuck
Yes, that is normal because as a dog gets older its fat will grow into all of the skin it has at birth. As they are small they will be very sensitive because the skin is not fat yet. so it hurts the dog.
Nociceptors are pain receptors that are especially abundant in the upper skin, joint capsules, the periosteum of bone and the walls of blood vessels. Very few pain receptors are located in visceral deep tissue. The three types of pain receptors are those sensitive to temperature extremes, those sensitive to mechanical damage, and those sensitive to chemicals.
sometimes it depends if the skin is sensitive
There are several different touch sensors in the skin. We can distinguish between blunt and sharp, a pressure, or a light stroke with a wisp of cotton wool. We can distinguish vibrations. Your finger tips and lips are very sensitive, and your back is pretty insensitive.