Chronic PainHelp! Why Is My Skin Sensitive To Touch?

Help! Why Is My Skin Sensitive To Touch?

Is your skin sensitive or does it hurt to touch all of a sudden? Let’s explore possible causes and treatments for sensitive skin.

Skin Sensitive To Touch Overview

Since your skin is the largest organ in your body, chronic pain in that region can become a huge nuisance. Many different conditions may contribute to sensitive skin. However, it can be hard to figure out just why your skin feels sensitive or even painful. Here’s a look at some conditions that can make your skin sensitive to touch all of a sudden, so you can find the treatment option right for you.

One Cause of Sensitive Skin Could be Shingles

Firstly, shingles, an infection from the chickenpox virus (varicella-zoster virus), causes a very painful, blistery rash. After you’ve contracted chickenpox, the virus remains inactive in your body. Later in life, the inactive virus may reactivate, turning into shingles (herpes zoster).

If you are over 40 years of age and have been exposed to the chickenpox virus, you are at risk for developing shingles. Increased risk factors include being older than 50 years of age and having a weakened immune system.

The shingles rash may be located anywhere on your body, but most commonly wraps around your torso. In addition, symptoms normally only affect one side of your body, often in a band across your skin. In some cases, you may experience postherpetic neuralgia, one of the most common complications of shingles. This may cause burning pain in your skin long after the shingles rash has disappeared.

skin sensitive to touch shingles vs chickenpox
skin sensitive to touch shingles vs chickenpox

Common shingles symptoms include:

  • Sensitivity to touch
  • Pain, burning, numbness or tingling
  • A red rash that starts a few days after the pain begins
  • Itching
  • Blisters that fill with fluid, open up and then crust over

Other shingles symptoms include:

Shingles symptoms manifest in people differently and the pain may be very intense. While a painful rash is common, some people never develop it.

skin sensitive to touch shingles vs chickenpox

If you suspect you have shingles, contact your doctor right away. It’s especially important to seek medical help if you:

  • have a rash around your eye or a widespread rash
  • are over 60 years old
  • have a weakened immune system

Common treatments for skin pain due to shingles include:

  • antiviral medications (acyclovir, valacyclovir, and famciclovir)
  • pain-relieving medications ( OTC acetaminophen)
  • home remedies (wet compresses, calamine lotion, and colloidal oatmeal baths)

Fibromyalgia Can Make Your Skin Sensitive to Touch

Sensitivity to touch due to tactile allodyniathermal allodynia or mechanical allodynia is a common symptom of fibromyalgia. When you have allodynia, your body sends pain signals from non-painful stimuli. In fact, even lightly touching your skin can feel unbearably painful.

Another common symptom is a tingling sensation. That tingling feeling might be in one specific area or widespread over your body. As with any chronic health condition, certain things may trigger your fibromyalgia symptoms to worsen, causing increased skin sensitivity.

Treatments for Fibromyalgia Pain
Treatments for Fibromyalgia Pain

Other fibromyalgia symptoms include:

Typically, fibromyalgia occurs with other types of health conditions, such as migraine headaches, autoimmune diseases, chronic fatigue syndrome, and irritable bowel syndrome. Often, fibromyalgia symptoms improve once other health conditions are addressed.

Common treatments for skin pain due to fibromyalgia include:

  • lidocaine and pregabalin
  • NSAIDs
  • electrical stimulation and hypnotherapy

Autoimmune Diseases

Autoimmune diseases occur when your immune system mistakenly attacks your body. These conditions are systemic, affecting the entire body. Often, autoimmune diseases that don’t directly affect the skin may cause skin sensitivity or redness. These autoimmune diseases include:

However, some types of autoimmune diseases directly affect the skin. For example, psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis are examples of autoimmune diseases that directly affect the skin. These conditions cause a build-up of skin cells that may appear scaly and red. Approximately 30% of those living with psoriasis develop psoriatic arthritis, an inflammatory form of arthritis.

Common psoriatic arthritis symptoms include:

  • Fatigue
  • Pain, tenderness and/or swelling in tendons
  • Swollen fingers and toes
  • Stiffness, pain, throbbing, swelling and tenderness in one or more joints
  • Reduced range of motion
  • Morning stiffness and tiredness
  • Nail changes
  • Redness and pain of the eye, such as conjunctivitis

skin sensitive to touch with rash

See your doctor regularly and talk about your skin symptoms. Your autoimmune disease treatment plan may need to be modified if skin pain is an issue.

Common treatments for skin pain due to autoimmune diseases include:

  • NSAIDs
  • Disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs)
  • Immunosuppressants
  • Steroid injections
  • Biologics
  • Topical treatments (topical corticosteroids, vitamin D analogues, anthralin, topical retinoids, calcineurin inhibitors, salicylic acid, coal tar, moisturizers)
  • Light therapy

Skin Sensitive to Touch, Dermatitis?

Dermatitis is a general term covering different types of skin inflammation. Typically, dermatitis causes an itchy rash and swollen or red skin. For instance, eczema, dandruff, and allergic reaction rashes are all forms of dermatitis.

If you come into contact with something you are allergic to, you may have an allergic reaction. Hives, a common skin condition from an allergic reaction, can cause an itchy and painful rash. Anytime you have or suspect an allergic reaction, it’s important to see your doctor or go to an urgent care clinic immediately.

Common treatments for skin pain due to dermatitis include:

Having skin sensitive to touch may be a sign of an underlying condition, such as some of the ones mentioned here. However, there are many conditions that may cause sensitive skin. It’s important to talk with your doctor about your skin sensitivities and other symptoms, so you can get on the right treatment plan.

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56 COMMENTS
  1. My skin is tender to the touch on my hips on the inside and out side of my hips lower left side of my back and top left shoulder right upper side of my back right next to my back bone a spot about as big of a dime my hands and feet become tender and stiffness my right knee and down the inside of my shines and I have a burning sensation in these areas as well with swelling no redness or rash and sometimes it’s so tender it causes extreme pain and cold chills. Any help on what to do would be gratefully helpful and I will be grateful and thankful

  2. I have had a skin sensitivity to the touch problem since November of 2020. It came on suddenly. No rash, no redness, no bumps, nothing. It feels like I have sun burn. I feel it every day, but the area where it hurts changes. Some times its on my upper back, some times on my biceps, some times even on my hip, but never on my legs at least not yet. Ibuprofen usually makes it goes away, but not always. Very bothersome. I have an appointment in a couple of weeks with a neurologist, so we will see. Does this sound familiar to anyone? I have been searching the internet for solutions, but haven’t found anything.

  3. I had bouts of severe face pain: behind my eye, under my eye, cheek area.
    it was trigeminal neuralgia (tic douloreaux) so painful that even shots of
    morphine didn’t help-got put on a drip. wondering how my job wearing a headset
    listening to people.noise/yelling all day aggravated some nerves connected to my
    hearing. internal bleeding was less painful than this condition. I wanted
    to blow my head off. tegretol helped it. haven’t had an attack in 10 years

  4. My condition (?) is slight different than what is described. I have no rash or anything and my skin isn’t initially sensitive. Repeat touching in the same spot makes my skin hypersensitive and then it causes pain or extreme irritation. I have had this for as long as I can remember. Just wondering if it’s normal

  5. Part of my arm has been feeling painful to touch and even when I’m not. Just moving my arm causes the pain to come like when I move my hand it causes the skin to scratch maybe. Touching it almost feels like it’s burning and when I’m not, I’d compare it to the feeling of an open wound. My arm looks like it normally does. There’s no rash or redness.

  6. My left side between my shoulder and shoulder blade has felt as if i have terrible sunburn but there is zero rash for last 8 days. I cannot currently wear a bra as my skin is so sensitive i do not feel run down or any of the other symptoms associated with shingles so its not that. Any ideas.

    • I have the exact same feeling on my right side around my shoulder blade. No rash, irritation, etc. but just sore and my bra really irritates it….do not have any other symptoms so at a loss….knowing someone else has the same thing makes me feel better, just wish I knew what causes it. I have had this for about a week now….

    • I am having the same problem. Under my right shoulder blade. It’s been about two weeks and I go without a bra as much as possible because it irritates the area even though there isnt any redness or bumps. It feels like its sunburned. Do you still feel this? What has been the rememdy/diagnosis?

      Thanks!

    • I have that similar feeling. Right behind my left armpit area. It feels like a big cut, or a very bad sunburn. Most painful, ( luckily) is right under the bra line, so wearing a bra isn’t to bad. It awful when I move the area.

  7. 5 stars
    I have the issue of skin being sensitive to touch and feeling all bruised after I’ve eaten too much the day before or multiple days in a row. Never figured out whats causing it though.

    • Hi Amanda! I am happy after reading your post. I was worried that I may be experiencing some type of peripheral neuropathy. I am anemic as well! I started taking iron last night. I hope this touch sensitivity goes away soon. It hurts even when my sheets touch me leg (left leg).

  8. You missed out Autism Spectrum Disorders / Aspergers. Some people are hyposensitive and others are hypersensitive to certain senses, including touch. So some people with autism will therefore have sensitivity to touch, and even feel pain when lightly brushed.

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