What makes your arms, legs and feet fall asleep? - podcast episode cover

What makes your arms, legs and feet fall asleep?

Aug 31, 20123 min
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Episode description

When you put prolonged pressure on your feet, arms or legs, you temporarily cut off or scramble communications between your brain and your body parts. Marshall explains exactly what happens when body parts "fall sleep" in this episode.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to Brainstuff from house stuff works dot com where smart happens. Hi. I'm Marcial Brain with today's question. What makes your arms, legs and feet fall asleep? This is definitely a strange sensation. You get up out of your seat and all you can feel from one foot is an uncomfortable tingling. Or you wake up in the middle of the night and you can't even move your arm at all, and then as your body part wakes up, this strange tingling intensifies just what is going on here.

Usually you feel this familiar sensation after you've been putting pressure on part of your body, sitting on a foot, sleeping on an arm, or something like that. When you apply this pressure for a prolonged period of time, you actually cut off communication from your brain to parts of your body. The pressure squeezes nerve pathways so that the

nerves can't transmit a electrochemical impulses properly. Nerve impulses carry sensation information from nerve endings in the body to the brain, as well as instructions from the brain to the parts of the body. When you interfere with this transfer by squeezing the nerve pathways, you don't have full feeling in that body part, and your brain has trouble telling that body part what to do. This pressure can also squeeze arteries,

stopping them from carrying nutrients to body cells. Without these nutrients, the nerve cells may behave abnormally, which can further interfere with communicating bodily sensations. Due to both of these factors, the information transmitted from the body part becomes somewhat jumbled and the brain receives strange messages. Some nerve cells don't transmit any information at all, and others start sending impulses erratically.

This causes you to feel a strange tingling sensation. Once you do move your foot, stretch your legs, or roll over off your arm, the nerve of impulses begin to flow properly again. You don't regain feeling right away, However, there is a certain amount of readjustment time before the nerves transmit impulses correctly. This increases the intensity of the tingling,

causing the familiar pins and needles sensation. If this has ever happened to you, you know that there are actually a few distinct sensations you go through as your body part wakes up. The tingling may be followed by a more uncomfortable burning sensation before your body part finally returns to normal. This happens because the nerves in your body are made up of separate long nerve cells that carry different sorts of impulses. These nerve fibers have different surrounding structures.

Some nerve fibers have thicker insulation around them, and so they take longer to begin transmitting impulses properly after they've been squeezed. The fibers that transmit pain and temperature information are relatively thin, so you feel the tingling sensations pretty quickly. Motor control fibers are thinner than the ones carrying touch information, so you can move the body part before you've regained

complete feeling in it. Eventually, all your nerve fibers return to normal, and you regain full use of your sleeping body part. For more on this and thousands of other topics, is it how staff works dot com

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