As far as injuries go,
paper cuts look pretty harmless, but there’s no denying the fact that they can
feel disproportionately agonising.
And when you look at
what's going on at a scientific level, paper cuts are surprisingly brutal, as
Ferris Jabr explains in the episode of Scientific
American’s Instant Egghead below.
For starters, the fact
that we’re most likely to experience paper cuts on our nerve-coated fingertips
makes the potential for pain pretty high from the start.
Our fingers are covered
with plenty of neurons, including nociceptors, which are there to detect any
potential harm, such as from harsh chemicals, high temperatures and also
pressure that might break the skin, as Jabr explains.
Any of these feelings will
trigger electrical and chemical signals that make the brain painfully aware of
an injury, and this tell us to stop doing whatever it is we’re doing.
But a paper cut doesn’t
just cause the pain of a regular cut. Although it may look like a pretty clean
incision, if you look at paper under a microscope it’s actually a nightmarishly
jagged surface that rips apart our cells and nerve endings.
“The piece of paper cuts
through skin more like a small saw than a knife,” Jabr explains. “As if that
wasn’t horrible enough, paper leaves behind chemical particles, irritating the
wound."
Because paper cuts are so
shallow, they actually don’t bleed or clot very much, which leaves all your
tissue and nerves exposed. Ouch.
Plus, there’s also the
psychological pain, which comes from knowing that we can be injured so badly by
something as small and innocuous as paper. We made you paper, why do you have
to be so mean?
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