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Why Scratching an Itch Feels So Good

The brain’s appetite for a good scratch is insatiable, and scientists are starting to understand why.

ByCody Cottier
Credit:GBJSTOCK/Shutterstock

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Mom knew what she was talking about after all: Scratching really does make the itch worse. Good as it feels, the burst of ecstasy you get from clawing your irritated skin only prolongs a vicious itch-scratch cycle, putting true relief farther out of reach. Our natural instinct betrays us.

But why? Though itch has bedeviled our species (not to mention many other animals) for thousands of years, scientists have just begun to comprehend the physiological mechanisms behind it. Over the past couple of decades, research has shown how scratching taps into our brain’s reward and immune systems, producing a strange mix of pleasure and discomfort that makes it all but impossible to resist.

“You scratch to feel better,” says Brian Kim, a neuroimmunologist at Mount Sinai’s Icahn School of Medicine, “but in doing so, you actually activate immune pathways that are counterproductive.” For most of us, this feedback loop is ...

  • Cody Cottier

    Cody Cottier is a freelance journalist for Discover Magazine, who frequently covers new scientific studies about animal behavior, human evolution, consciousness, astrophysics, and the environment. 

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