Pain And Changes In Weather...Am I Alone????

Posted by cahnny @cahnny, Sep 10, 2016

I've read articles saying that changes in weather can effect severity of pain and, of course, there's the old timers who swear the old bones ache when it's gonna rain. Well I guess, at 70 years old, I'm now an old timer and, let me tell you...my old bones and muscles, and skin, and hair HURT. There are days I hurt from neuropathy and Morton's Neuroma in my feet and legs, to profound itching along my degenerating spine (I think due to pinches nerves), to aching joints, swollen cysts behind my arthritic knees, gut discomfort from IBS, pinched nerves EVERYWHERE to neck pain that goes down my arms, to skin that just feels sore and tingly. I'm talking all these things all at the same time. It's like someone flipped a switch and lit me up like a roman candle. One doctor will say...that could very well be. Another doctor will say poppy cock. Well poppy cock this...I know my body and I know how it feels and I know it's not in my head. Now it might be coming FROM my head...as in mixed up signals from the brain saying YOU'RE IN PAIN but the pain and sensations are real.

I needed a new bedside alarm clock so purchased a clock that also provides barometric pressure, temperature, and humidity readings. It seems, without fail, on days when there is a dramatic swing in barometric pressure my body goes into all over intense pain mode. Do any of you have the same experiences??? I'm not talking just a little aching. I'm talking REAL discomfort.

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Chronic Pain Support Group.

@marley7119

Sounds like you’re writing my story also.

Jump to this post

I believe childhood traumas such as losing a parent from divorce changing schools harsh punishment and emotionally distant parent esp. a mother can affect physical and mental health.
During stressful times RA seems to be more painful and flares mor often. It would be interesting to study adults with common histories.
I am very grateful to my doctor and his treatment plan he always listens to my questions and if necessary adjusts my treatment. The confidence I have in his treatment plan for me is the “other medicine” and it works! Trust is essential.
Be well, Jilly

REPLY
@jilliemo12345

I believe childhood traumas such as losing a parent from divorce changing schools harsh punishment and emotionally distant parent esp. a mother can affect physical and mental health.
During stressful times RA seems to be more painful and flares mor often. It would be interesting to study adults with common histories.
I am very grateful to my doctor and his treatment plan he always listens to my questions and if necessary adjusts my treatment. The confidence I have in his treatment plan for me is the “other medicine” and it works! Trust is essential.
Be well, Jilly

Jump to this post

Who is your doctor at Mayo you are referring to and what is their specialty if you don't mind me asking?

REPLY
@marley7119

Who is your doctor at Mayo you are referring to and what is their specialty if you don't mind me asking?

Jump to this post

Hi Marley, I do not have a doctor at the Mayo, I live in Santa Barbara, Calif.
My doctors are with the Sansum Clinic.
In talking about my situation as a child I was sharing my belief that the “growing pains” I suffered from most likely begin during and because of how I grew up. Children living under stress do suffer many different problems both physically and mentally . We humans are adaptive and can have good lives and become healthy with the proper care. I believe I am a survivor who has had a very good adult life but have physical challenges that were probably started very young. I don’t know if this answers any questions you might have, I hope so.
Have a beautiful day.
Jilly

REPLY

It seems to me you have a profound sensitivity to changes in nature. There are no doubt gifts you have from this as well, but I am sorry for all you have had to suffer.

There is no place it may seem to easily go to, to escape a sudden change in barometric pressure. It is commonly recognized that animals behave differently with changes in the weather. For example sea birds often rest on rocks along the shore or fly very low with low barometric pressure. It has been proven in a hypobaric climatic wind tunnel at the University of Western Ontario that birds behave differently when all conditions are maintained constant with the one exception being barometric pressure. It appears birds have their own way to register changes to barometric pressure in themselves and change their behaviour in different ways, such as immediately feeding in simulated storm condition.
This was reported in the journal “Animal Behaviour”.

Maybe you could follow barometric behaviour very closely like on an hourly or half hourly basic. Chart your sense of pain with barometric pressure. As soon as possible after you detect a significant change get comfortable in a bath where you are covered as much as possible. Keep the temperature warm. I assume at room temperature the air in the room follows outdoor barometric pressure, but in water the pressure would be more constant. See if your sense of pain stays lower and more stable under water and doesn’t fluctuate with the barometric pressure.

I imagine this could sometime be inconvenient or impossible, but it could be used with a cumulative build up of pain.

I found this information on birds and barometric pressure by chance, but maybe you were meant to hear it. I think water is our most powerful source of health and the most reliable. There is a range of receptivity with everything. You just happen to be at the highest levels of receptivity. This can be very good and very rewarding, but also has its risks and limitations. I hope you find a way to control any negative effects.

REPLY
@spruceriver

It seems to me you have a profound sensitivity to changes in nature. There are no doubt gifts you have from this as well, but I am sorry for all you have had to suffer.

There is no place it may seem to easily go to, to escape a sudden change in barometric pressure. It is commonly recognized that animals behave differently with changes in the weather. For example sea birds often rest on rocks along the shore or fly very low with low barometric pressure. It has been proven in a hypobaric climatic wind tunnel at the University of Western Ontario that birds behave differently when all conditions are maintained constant with the one exception being barometric pressure. It appears birds have their own way to register changes to barometric pressure in themselves and change their behaviour in different ways, such as immediately feeding in simulated storm condition.
This was reported in the journal “Animal Behaviour”.

Maybe you could follow barometric behaviour very closely like on an hourly or half hourly basic. Chart your sense of pain with barometric pressure. As soon as possible after you detect a significant change get comfortable in a bath where you are covered as much as possible. Keep the temperature warm. I assume at room temperature the air in the room follows outdoor barometric pressure, but in water the pressure would be more constant. See if your sense of pain stays lower and more stable under water and doesn’t fluctuate with the barometric pressure.

I imagine this could sometime be inconvenient or impossible, but it could be used with a cumulative build up of pain.

I found this information on birds and barometric pressure by chance, but maybe you were meant to hear it. I think water is our most powerful source of health and the most reliable. There is a range of receptivity with everything. You just happen to be at the highest levels of receptivity. This can be very good and very rewarding, but also has its risks and limitations. I hope you find a way to control any negative effects.

Jump to this post

Hi @spruceriver, what a welcome post. At this point, Barometric pressure pretty much controls my life and my willingness to adapt to existing reality. I have recently figured out the up-and-down episodes of the BP. Relevant pain is more intensive when the pressure is increasing. Just the opposite when pressure is declining.

Thanks.
Chris Trout

REPLY

I am suffering from barometric pressure changes right now.
Our spring weather has been changing almost hourly for the past few weeks and I am in the clutches of cluster migraines for a full 7 days now. The worst it's been in many years.

REPLY

All I know is that my knees and back are better at predicting rain than our local weather forecaster. I had physical therapy for an ankle injury (torn tendon) and on days when I would complain about aches and pains my PT would tell me almost all of her patients were saying the same thing. So, yes I believe the “old timers” stories and I am one (age79).

REPLY

I too suffer with BP changes and they are even more brutal in cold or even chilly weather. I do have Central Sensitization, I think better called Central Pain Syndrome. Ppl can a little better understand that term - I’m weary of blank faces and no comforting comment when I tell ppl, who ask, my diagnosis. If I didn’t use Indica THC and a little CBD, at bedtime, and a little Sativa 1:1 THC:CBD before 2 pm, I wouldn’t be here today bc the pain is terrible. (Very small portion of gummies). I am also on Lyrica but I’m suspicious it is triggering headaches. Is anyone else suspicious of this?

REPLY

I suffer from this. I have fibromyalgia. There's a cold front coming in now so I'm hurting bad all over. Spring and fall are my bad times

REPLY

I have more pain in rainy weather. So far I haven’t found anything to make my foot pain and tingling less severe even when the weather is nice

REPLY
Please sign in or register to post a reply.