Help.

  • ThesePaycheckAvenging@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    That’s my go-to relief too. Take the spoon out of someone’s coffee for extra laziness (ask first though. Avoids weird discussions. Or so I’ve heard.)

    • LiveLaughLoveRevenge@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      This is the answer. /thread

      Doesn’t have to be coffee of course - just get a spoon from hot (not boiling) water. It should be at the temperature where you can juuust stand to have it on your skin. Press and repeat as needed.

      It will feel intense - even intensely itchy - for a couple of seconds, then….relief!

      • mke@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Is the relief related to nociception, to inflammation, or to inactivation of the bug saliva?

        • naeap
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          1 year ago

          as far as I know the heat breaks up the proteins in the bug saliva and that’s stops the itching/infection - but I’m no doctor…

            • naeap
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              1 year ago

              that’s probably you have to make the heat treatment on quite short time after the bite. still, subjectively it still helps afterwards. It starts to itch more for a minute and calms down after
              don’t really have a theory in why this works then…

              how long does the child’s treatment helps? does the itch stay away after it warms up again?
              I already tried to cool down stings with cold packs, but usually the itch comes back rather quickly.

              will read your link now, as I got some surprise free time on hand - sorry for the possible premature answer/questions

              edit: read the abstract (I think, I can’t access now without an account/paying?), and I think my questions still stands, as they only seem to say the applying cold stills the itch. maybe I’m missing something because of not having the full article - will try scihub

              edit2: got lucky on scihub :⁠-⁠)
              ok, seems there is really something to it. but my subjective reactions were different. maybe time of application plays a role here as well. would be cool to know the physiology behind it