For an example of the pain threshold, think of a dentist drilling in your teeth. It doesn’t hurt…until it does! It all depends on when your threshold is reached, and it’s different for all of us.
Another real-life example is the blood pressure cuff that nurses wrap around your arm and pump up. At first, there’s light pressure. Then the pressure increases and increases. For someone with a high pain threshold, it may never get uncomfortable. For someone with a low threshold, it may start uncomfortable and become quite painful.
Pain Thresholds and Fibromyalgia
Pain thresholds vary from person to person and research suggests that they are abnormally low in fibromyalgia. That’s why things that aren’t painful to most people can cause pain in those with this condition. The medical term for pain caused by things that don’t normally hurt is allodynia.
In fibromyalgia, the pressure pain threshold (the point at which pressure becomes painful) is a common area of focus for researchers. A low-pressure pain threshold is a reason behind the tender-point exam, which is a common diagnostic method for the condition.
Two studies have looked at whether doctors can use a blood pressure cuff as a simple way to identify patients who should be evaluated for fibromyalgia. Both concluded that it’s a reasonably accurate way to identify a low pressure-pain threshold.
The threshold may also be low when it comes to mechanical stimulation, which involves something moving across your skin. This often shows up as someone being “sensitive” to things like tags in their shirt. It may make heavier or coarser fabrics feel like sandpaper. A hand placed on the upper arm may not hurt, while lightly rubbing the skin does.
Some research also suggests that low pain thresholds are a part of chronic fatigue syndrome and juvenile chronic fatigue syndrome. At least one study shows that pain thresholds drop following exercise for people with this condition. That response may be part of a key symptom of the diseases, which is called post-exertional malaise.
Threshold vs. Tolerance
The term pain threshold is often confused with (or wrongly used interchangeably with) pain tolerance. These terms are actually quite different.
With pain tolerance, this can mean physically breaking down (passing out, vomiting) or mentally breaking down (crying or screaming uncontrollably).
On the surface, these two concepts can seem similar. However, someone with a low threshold can have a high tolerance and vice versa.
Imagine someone who rarely feels pain (high threshold) but then has a major injury. Because they have little experience dealing with pain, their tolerance might be low. Meanwhile, someone who is in pain all the time (low threshold) may be able to function even at high pain levels if a major injury were to occur.
A person with a low threshold and low tolerance may be severely debilitated anytime they’re in pain. Someone with a high threshold and high tolerance, on the other hand, may rarely notice pain.
A Word From Verywell
People with a low pain threshold and/or tolerance can often be harshly judged by others. It’s important to realize that they aren’t being “weak” or “making a big deal out of nothing.” These are simply physiological responses they can’t control.
With that said, these levels can and do change over time. In someone with fibromyalgia, it may even be different during flares than it is during remissions when symptom levels are lower.