Just had this thought while running with my dog and getting fatigued. Why does it feel like that? What is going on in the tissue to make it “burn?”
Mine just tastes like raw hamburger.
my best educated guess is that the high rate of gas exchange incudes cell stress/minor inflamation
There’s a few factors really, your out of shape comment could be one, no offence meant If you’re pushing your lungs, and airways in general, further than usual, and quite literally stretching them, and faster than they’re used to, the extra stretching can cause that feeling. Lessens as you get fitter. If its proper cold, or.dry, and if you mostly breathe through your mouth, or both, the air isn’t a match for the warm humid like air in your lungs and airways…nose breathing is a big thing to improve your running, there’s a great guy whose name I cannot recall who is a massive advocate for nose breathng in runners and how it can massively help your long distance proper too! Includes things about dehydration lessening etc…worth a search for
no offense
None taken. I know I’m unhealthy. I smoke, too. So all that is a factor. Actually was wondering if it was just from use or if maybe I am not breathing the right way. Possibly both. I have a habit of subconsciously holding my breath when doing physical activity and I know that ain’t good. lol
It can be a few things, without feeling it personally, and with your personal assessment, my best guess is what you felt was a “stitch in your side”.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Side_stitch
There are alot of theories on what exactly the precise biological cause is, but there are known things that make it more likely, and ways to sort of treat it when it comes up.
Nah, this feeling I am posting about is felt in the chest area. From like the diaphragm to the back of the throat. It’s not a stabbing pain, but as stated kind a burning sensation. Not extremely painful but quite uncomfortable as you’re trying to catch your breath after you stop running. That’s my fault for not giving a lot of detail.
Could be exercise-induced asthma? I get this as well and only found out it wasn’t a common affliction a few weeks ago, when it was pointed out that this might be a cause. For me at least, after a while the pain gets so bad that every time I swallow it feels like my throat doesn’t want to reopen.
For what it’s worth, the burning in the lungs you describe still happens when you’re fit. It’s just that you’re going at a faster pace for a longer time before it happens.
Humans weren’t meant to run, we were made to computer
I assume you know you’re joking, But actually the main asset that let us our specie survive is our ability to run for long where we beat most other animals. Tons of average persons run marathon for fun. Try to bring your dog running and you’ll see that you’re best friend will get tired before you.
We don’t have nice claws, we don’t even run that fast. But we’re one of the few animals able to run for hours and hours. Which mean that we could hunt by exhausting our target, and harvest fruits/vegetable over a long distance.
Someone wrote an awesome short story once about humans from an alien’s perspective and how they will keep following you forever, until you can’t move, until you’re collapsed from exhaustion. I wish I could find it to share right now.
I’d love to know the title of this as well.
Same here!
Replying as a reminder
Yeah I was joking.
That’s wild though, I can’t jog for more than like, 5 minutes at most haha and I’m pretty fit like my BMI is pretty much perfect, no diabetus, body fat low etc.
Even as a kid my lungs would burn just running for like 10 minutes to the point of breathlessnes and collapse long before my muscles would even begin to feel tired, I never understood why they kept forcing us to but I guess it makes sense now.
I thought our evolutionary advantage was building guns honestly.
Getting reddit default sub vibes now.
Acid buildup in muscle tissue. The intense effort creates more waste chemicals than you bloodstream can handle so it builds up locally.
How come running hard (especially when out of shape) makes your lungs feel like they are on fire?
TIL bad chemicals in muscles make people’s lung tissue burn. 🙄
They’re asking about lungs
Yeah, I don’t think this answers the question unless we’re talking about the heart. The diaphragm is where all the muscle tissue involved in breathing is and that isn’t what’s hurting.
I’m no medical professional, but if I recall correctly, lactic acid is transported by the blood stream, especially when muscles aren’t built up to deal with the excess acid locally. Exercise will alter your blood’s pH even if you’re in shape. Blood also turns more acidic simply by the presence of more CO2 in the system, but that shouldn’t affect the pH too much.
That said, I can find no source online indicating that the change in pH is the cause of the burning feeling when exercising while out of shape.
Thanks, that was really interesting!
Because
Shit. Must’ve been breathing through my gills this whole time.
ask Aaron
I don’t get the reference. Who’s A-a-ron?
Bushnell
Only tangentially related to your question, but I’ve seen recommendations for Kettlebell ladders to increase your VO2 Max as a phenomenal way to train your lungs for running.
Aerobic high-intensity intervals improve VO2max more than moderate training
Men’s health article (Yeah yeah, fie on tiktok)
Higher blood pressures and heart rates from exercising when unfit can cause small blood vessels to burst in your lungs as well. It’s not usually enough to cause an issue but you can taste it in your breath.
[citation needed]
Thanks. I don’t have time to read it right now, but you’re certain that’s a very common thing to happen? I’m overweight and have been jogging and running a lot lately. When I run hard, my nose and lungs burn. I like to sprint in intervals until I can’t anymore, after jogging, and then walk for a bit. Repeat. I’m wondering if this is dangerous at all.
I don’t know if it’s common but from what I can tell it’s not harmful. In rare cases it can be but in most it isn’t.
Thank you for the honesty. I’ll read over it now.