Presidential Candidate Mimics A Sex Act
Society & Culture4 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by lisajane83. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It is not the scab itself that it is itching, rather the healing wound underneath. The scab itself is formed from dead cells which provide a protective barrier to help stop the wound becoming infected.
As the skin regenerates under the scab, new nerve endings are slowly developing and growing back into place. As this happens they will occasionally "misfire", causing the itching sensation which scratching will relieve by overloading the nerve impulse temporarily.
Years ago I had an operation on my nose which involved cutting a flap of skin away, then sewing it back. For several months afterwards, I would get itching on one side of my nose, but I couldn't scratch it, because the nerves were not sufficiently healed to register the scratch. Aaargh!
Difficult as it is, you should try not to scratch or pick at the scab at all if you can help it. When the skin is fully healed, it will drop off by itself. If you pick it off before the skin is healed, you run the risk of permanent scarring which would be a lot worse than if you had left the wound to heal completely.