1. The density of sensory nerves (nociceptors) differs in different body areas. The head area, palms, hands, genitals, and nipples are rich in sensory nerves, which tend to hurt more. Major organs such as the brain and the liver are not pain-sensitive.
2 The intensity of tissue damage Volume correlates to the pain duration and scale. Severe and prolonged tissue damage is more painful and lasts longer.
3 The Regeneration rate of the damaged tissue is directly proportional to the speed at which the pain passes. For example, skin cells recover quickly, so the pain passes relatively quickly when we cut ourselves superficially with a knife.
The gastrointestinal tract cells have a relatively high regenerative capacity, but this is not true when the intestinal flora is unbalanced, or the intestines are acidic.
Links:
Subjective pain scale and the objective pain level.
https://www.sf-healing.com/page/223 (Copy & Paste)
Crohn's disease, Ulcerative colitis, and IBS.
https://www.sf-healing.com/page/122 (Copy & Paste)
The next post: Glutathione - Essential antioxidant at the cellular level. (Often ignored) Critical for IBD patients.
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