It depends on the two areas it travels to.
Yes, they travel some fast!
Referred pain occurs when pain is felt in a different area of the body from its actual source. This phenomenon can happen because of the way nerves are wired and connected in the body. For example, when a nerve that supplies sensation to a particular area also receives input from a different area, confusion can occur, leading to the perception of pain in the second area.
Pain receptors technically do not adapt. This is due to their role in alerting the body of danger. Adaptation to pain would result in an individual getting used to the pain and therefore not responding to it.. This could have a serious result.
Referred pain. It occurs when a problem in one part of the body is felt in another part that is not the actual source of the pain.
1. we dissolve a body fast with acid 2. Because acid is very strong
Fast pain messages travel along the lateral pain system. Slower pain messages travel along the medial pain system.
That depends on the speed of the impact.
The 2 components of pain are fast pain, and slow pain. Fast pain is a sharp, localized pain and slow pain is dull and diffused and mostly unpleasant.
pain that happens very quickly
Yes, they travel some fast!
IV (intravenous) medication works the fastest because it is injected directly into the body.
because they are thin and and travel smoothly
Blood travels through the human body at an average speed of about 3 to 4 miles per hour.
Yes. Pain is sometimes difficult to pinpoint. And some types of pain tend to radiate. That means that they either seem to travel along a line, as in nerve pain, or are connected somehow to another part, like in muscles.
treatment of body pain
An individual blood cell takes about 60 seconds to make a complete circuit of the body.
The nervous system controls pain in the body.