It is a unremarkably cover phenomenon that changes in the weather can charm the intensity of continuing aches and botheration that patients suffer from . Yet despite this being observe as far back   as 2,000 years ago , it has often been overlooked and disregard . However , the preliminary findingsof a novel study look into   this link has found that there may actually be some truth to it .

TheCloudy With a Chance of Painproject has enlist over 9,000 people across three urban center in England who stomach from chronic pain to log their symptoms daily using a smartphone app . This data has then been combined with what the weather was like at the same time , set aside the researcher to liken how much pain in the neck the participant were feeling during sure   climate conditions .

While the current task is only halfway through its official running play , the researchers make up one’s mind to report theirpreliminary solvent at the British Science Festival . They found that as the number of sunny sidereal day increase from February to April , those who report feeling chronic pain lessen ; when another wet front rolled in during June , however , participant account an increment in symptom .

While it is exclusively possible that longer day in the sun may simply make   people feel better , and thus could work whether they feel pain or not , the sketch platter   the participants ' moods in an seek to answer for for this .

What may be behind the reported connection between painfulness and these spells of loaded weather is still unknown . Some of the participants consider that it is not just the damp but also the   cold that piss the pain worse , yet deliberate that the report nuisance increase in the month of June , the cold aspect may actually be more of a myth . Lead investigator   Will Dixon , a rheumatologist and prof of digital epidemiology at the University of Manchester , think it create sensation that a change in pressure consort with the wetter conditions influences pain stage .

“ In terms of physiology , I think it makes most sense that it would be pressure that would charm nuisance , particularly in arthritis , "   Professor Dixon toldThe Independent .   " A high proportion of patients believe they can predict the atmospheric condition free-base on their symptoms .   In parliamentary law for them to do that , there must be something in the weather that influences their pain and the weather condition that is come .   Pressure may change the sensibility to pain , but I think there ’s potential to be sub - groups of patients who have different relationship . ”

The scientists   hope to enlist further Volunteer to take part in the study   via the app and   to keep garner data until April of next yr .