Medical Why do we have head aches? Our brains can't feel anything.

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Headaches occur despite the brain's inability to feel pain, primarily due to the activation of pain-sensitive structures surrounding the brain, such as the meninges. Tension headaches, often linked to muscle tension in the neck and scalp, can arise from stress, anxiety, or other emotional factors. However, research indicates that increased muscle tension may not be a significant factor in all cases of tension headaches. The sensation of pain in the forehead, rather than the eyes, is attributed to the distribution of sensory nerves and the way pain signals are processed. In contrast, migraines are characterized by throbbing pain and are thought to stem from chemical irritation of the meninges, activating pain pathways that transmit signals to the brain. Understanding these mechanisms helps clarify the complex nature of headache pain.
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I often wonder how do we have head aches, when the brain does not posses the ability to experience pain. The yahoo answers are faintly useful, so I decided to put one here. Someone told me that, the head ache, is related to a muscle being sore. For instance, if my forehead is aching, it means that my eyes are over worked, and the muscles inside are getting sore. But my question, is how is it that the forehead experiences the pain? and not the eye itself. What causes the sensation, which makes us feel as if our brain is actually hurting? (mind you I am not talking about migraines, although information about that would be gladly welcomed)
 
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http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/000797.htm
"Tension headaches occur when neck and scalp muscles become tense, or contract. The muscle contractions can be a response to stress, depression, a head injury, or anxiety."

http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/tension-headache/DS00304/DSECTION=causes
"The exact cause or causes of tension headache are unknown. Experts used to think that the pain of tension headache stemmed from muscle contraction in the face, neck and scalp, perhaps as a result of heightened emotions, tension or stress. But research suggests that there doesn't appear to be a significant increase in muscle tension in people diagnosed with tension headache."

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16492942 (free!)
"Because the meninges are the only intracranial sites from which pain can be evoked, headaches that accompany intracranial pathologies (e.g., meningitis, subarachnoid hemorrhage, tumor) are thought to result from meningeal stimulation and consequent activation of meningeal sensory fibers (Wolff 1963). Migraine headache, although not accompanied by any detectable pathology, shares certain clinical features with headaches of intracranial origin (Blau and Dexter 1981) and has also been postulated to result from activation of the meningeal sensory innervation."

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20062053 (free!)
"Migraine is a recurring, episodic neurological disorder characterized as a unilateral, throbbing headache that is commonly associated with a variety of other symptoms (e.g., nausea, vomiting, irritability, fatigue). Migraine pain is thought to originate from chemical irritation of the meninges, which leads to transmission of nociceptive signals from the dura mater to the brain via the so-called trigeminovascular pathway"
 
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