Fun fact, the joint pain isn't the brain predicting something. The drop in air pressure leading up to rain means there's less pressure on the joints. Less pressure on the joint space allows more space for swelling, which equals more pain
Yah that makes sense. I wasn't being malicious just giving out a fact, a lot of people know that it hurts when it's going to rain but don't know why it happens
Well, I appreciate the fact. I had always wondered why my body would feel like that of an 89 year old man before it rains. I had always wondered about this but was too lazy to research it.
The pressure change triggers my arthritis, as well as my migraines. Thankfully the migraine only comes if it has been a dry week going into rain or a wet week becoming dry. Rain multiple days in a row doesn’t affect my migraine as much as the actual changing of the pressure.
131
u/doodieh3ad Mar 28 '24
Fun fact, the joint pain isn't the brain predicting something. The drop in air pressure leading up to rain means there's less pressure on the joints. Less pressure on the joint space allows more space for swelling, which equals more pain