counter customizable free hit
Body's response to repetitive laughter is similar to effect of repetitive exercise

 

 

 

 

 

 
 


Home
Up
Age-Defying Therapies
Aging America Preparation
Aging Brains Develop
Aging Disease Hotspots
Aging Factors
Aging in Place
Aging in Place Challenge
Aging in Place Benefits
Aging in US
Aging Perspectives
Aging Perspectives Survey
Aging Research Shortfall
Aging with GRACE
American, English Life Span
Amish Aging
Anti-Aging Acceptance
Anti-Aging Hormones
Anti-Oxidant Role Questioned
As Old As You Feel
Aspirin Beneft Questioned
Aspirin Benefit Test
Avoid Heat Stroke
Barefoot Fall Risk
Belief in God
Beauty and Aging Perspective
Beneficial Health Care Program
Benfits of Oils for Skin
Benefits Checkup Urged
Better Health Struggle
Better Spaces for Elderly
Bile Fountain of Youth
Birth Order Impact
Body Satisfaction Differences
Boost Aging Skin Cells
Bus Pass Health Benefit
Caffine Helps Memory
Caffine Reverses Memory Loss
Childhood Events' Impact
Cleaner Air Cuts Mortality
Clincal Trial Exclusion
Clues to Aging
Congregate Living Benefit
Cognitive Skills
Creative Link Benefit
DC Senior Needs Study
Decision-Making Influence
Defining Successful Aging
Defying Expectations
Easter Seals Project
Education, Status, Longevity
Elderly Advice to Grads
Elderly Happiness Secrets
Elderly Hospital Admissions
Elderly Housing Program
Elderly Med Tests Questioned
Elderly Thyroid Patient Risk
Elderly Want Own Home
Emotion Impact on Aging
Emotional Intelligence
Environment and aging
Extend Life Expectancy
Facial Bones Age
Falling Among Elderly
Fat Cells Impact
Fat-Loss, Longevity
Fewer Hot Flashes
Fighting Muscle Loss
Fountain of Youth from Tap
Fountain of Youth Quest
Four Death Risks
Frailty, Surgery Results
Friends Boost Longevity
Functional Training Benefit
Gardening Add Zest to Life
Gardening Benefits
Gene Life Span Impact
Gene Responsible for Aging
Gene Variants, Lifespan
Genetic Signatures
Get Shingles Vaccination
Getting Seniors Moving
Glimpse of Aging Future
Glucose Death Links
Growing Older at Home
Grow Old, Grow Happier
Habits to Resolutions
Hair Care for Seniors
Happiness Improves Life
Healthier Aging
Healthier Aging Impact
Health Reform Impact
Health vs. Fitness
Healthy Monday Tips
Helping Elderly Independence
Hot Flushes Linger
Housing for Aging
Housing Grant
Hunger in America
Hungering for Longevity
Illness, Injury Disability Link
Impaired Immune Response
Impending Aging Crisis
Improve Aging Skin
Injuries Killing Elderly
Is Aging Inevitable?
Israel Life Span Exeeds U.S.
Keeping Seniors Mobile
Key to Prayer Success
Less Pain Medication
Lifelong Health Gap
Lifting Aging Faces
Life Span Regulator
Lifestyle Impact Longevity
Living Fast Life
Longevity Molecule
Longevity Preparation
Longevity Secrets
Longevity Study
Looking Older
Lower Disablity Risk
Maintaining Mobility
Maintain Thinking Skills
Making Muscle Mass
Making Old Muscles Young
Male Menopause
Male Menopause Common
Managing Menopause Study
Mapping Aging Process
Massage Health Benefits
Mature Market Institute
Men and Doctors
Men, Medical Appointments
Men on Fire
Menopause Map
Men Urged Protect Health
Minoritiy Participants Needed
Mobility Issues
Molecular Aging Mechanisms
More Sick Time
Moving Aids Fitness
Music for All Ages
Muscles Fountain of Youth
Music Offsets Aging
National Mobility Awareness
NCOA BenefitsCheckup
New Theory on Aging
Noisy Aging Theory
Normal Body Temperature
Obesity, Aging
Older Father, Longer Life
Older Men Health Concerns
Overactive Thyroid Life Threat
Older Adults' Struggles
Older Americans Act
Over 50 Attitudes
Oxidants and Aging
PA Aging in Place Legislation
Paradox of Aging
Personality Genes Aid Aging
Physical Decline Older Adults
Planning, Education Keys
Positive Aging
Positive Social Skills Impact
Postponing Surgery
Post-Treatment Mortality
Primate Aging Similarities
Protein Fights Aging
Reaching 100 Years
Rebranding Exercise Message
Rediscovering Pragmatism
Resting Brain Stem Cells
Reverse Stem Cell Aging
Road Map to Life
Saving Brain White Matter
Seniors in Public Housing
Sepsis Awareness
Sleep and Aging
Slow Down Aging Process
Space Age Enzyme
Spiritual Lift Benefits
Stress Leads to Aging
Stress Leads to Mortalitiy
Successful Aging Secret
Summer Heat Safety
Side Effect Prevention
Stop Strength Loss
Studying Aging in Dish
SuperAgers Study
Testosterone Decline
Testosterone Older Men
Testosterone Slows Muscle Loss
Testosterone Study
Time in Nature
Tips to Live to 100
Training for Aphasia
Turn Back the Clock
Two Perspectives on Aging
Use Holidays for Family Check
Using Own Stem Cells
US Life Expectancy Lags
Vaccines for Adults Important
Value of Laughter
Vitality Project
Walking Aids Recovery
Walking Speed Aids Life
Walgreens Wellness Tour
Web Clues to Aging
Wellness Products
Why Muscles Weaken
Women and Aging
Women's Biiological Clock
50 Aging America Facts
50+ Lack Resources
65 is New 45
2011 Healthy Aging Tips
2011 Older Americans' Month
2012 Older Americans Month
Music Improves Health
Manage Holiday Stress
Holiday Party Traps
New Page 3

Home
Aging and Arthritis
Aging and Cancer
Aging Avoid Entrepreneurship
Aging, Cancer Deterrent
Aging Causes Diseases
Aging Consumer Launches
Aging, Depression
Boomers' News
Confronting Mental Decline
Elderly Driving Stories
End of Life
Seniors' Concerns
Part D Confusion
Health Care Concerns
Environments for Aging
Extra Day Personal Care
Texas Takes Aging Lead
Kohl Heads  Committee
Senior Dogs Deserve Care
What Concerns Seniors
2009 Aging in America Facts

 

 

 



Google
 

 

Web TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com

 

AddThis Feed Button   Now, keep up to date with daily feeds of newly posted stories about America's Seniors...click on the box to the left

Body’s response to repetitive laughter is similar to effect of repetitive exercise

 

Newswise —Laughter is a highly complex process. Joyous or mirthful laughter is considered a positive stress (eustress) that involves complicated brain activities leading to a positive effect on health.

 Norman Cousins first suggested the idea that humor and the associated laughter can benefit a person’s health in the 1970s.

His ground-breaking work, as a layperson diagnosed with an autoimmune disease, documented his use of laughter in treating himself—with medical approval and oversight—into remission.

He published his personal research results in the New England Journal of Medicine and is considered one of the original architects of mind-body medicine.

Dr. Lee S. Berk, a preventive care specialist and psychoneuroimmunology researcher at Loma Linda University’s Schools of Allied Health (SAHP) and Medicine, and director of the molecular research lab at SAHP, Loma Linda, CA, and Dr. Stanley Tan have picked up where Cousins left off.

 

Since the 1980s, they have been studying the human body’s response to mirthful laughter and have found that laughter helps optimize many of the functions of various body systems.

 

Berk and his colleagues were the first to establish that laughter helps optimize the hormones in the endocrine system, including decreasing the levels of cortisol and epinephrine, which lead to stress reduction.

 

They have also shown that laughter has a positive effect on modulating components of the immune system, including increased production of antibodies and activation of the body’s protective cells, including T-cells and especially Natural Killer cells’ killing activity of tumor cells.

 

Their studies have shown that repetitious “mirthful laughter,” which they call Laughercise©, causes the body to respond in a way similar to moderate physical exercise.

 

Laughercise© enhances your mood, decreases stress hormones, enhances immune activity, lowers bad cholesterol and systolic blood pressure, and raises good cholesterol (HDL).

 

As Berk explains, “We are finally starting to realize that our everyday behaviors and emotions are modulating our bodies in many ways.” His latest research expands the role of laughter even further.

 

A New Study: Humor versus Distress, Effect on and Appetite Hormones


Berk, along with his colleague Dr. Jerry Petrofsky at Loma Linda University, and their team have recently completed a new study, which is being presented at the 2010 Experimental Biology conference in Anaheim, CA between April 24-28, 2010.

 

In the current study, 14 healthy volunteers were recruited to a three-week study to examine the effects that eustress (mirthful laughter) and distress have on modulating the key hormones that control appetite.

 

 During the study, each subject was required to watch one 20-minute video at random that was either upsetting (distress) or humorous (eustress) in nature.

 

The study was a cross-over design, meaning that the volunteers waited one week after watching the first video to eliminate its effect, then watched the opposite genre of video.

 

For a distressing video clip, the researchers had the volunteer subjects watch the tense first 20 minutes of the movie Saving Private Ryan.

 

This highly emotional video clip is known to distress viewers substantially and equally.

 

For the eustress video, the researchers had each volunteer choose a 20-minute video clip from a variety of humorous options including stand-up comedians and movie comedies.

 

Allowing the volunteers to “self-select” the eustress that most appealed to them guaranteed their maximum humor response. 

During the study, the researchers measured each subject’s blood pressure and took blood samples immediately before and after watching the respective videos.

 

Each blood sample was separated out into its components and the liquid serum was examined for the levels of two hormones involved in appetite, leptin and ghrelin, for each time point used in the study.

 

When the researchers compared the hormone levels pre- and post-viewing, they found that the volunteers who watched the distressing video showed no statistically significant change in their appetite hormone levels during the 20-minutes they spent watching the video.

 

In contrast, the subjects who watched the humorous video had changes in blood pressure and also changes in the leptin and ghrelin levels.

 

Specifically, the level of leptin decreased as the level of ghrelin increased, much like the acute effect of moderate physical exercise that is often associated with increased appetite.

 

Berk explains that this research does not conclude that humor increases appetite.

 

He explains, “The ultimate reality of this research is that laughter causes a wide variety of modulation and that the body’s response to repetitive laughter is similar to the effect of repetitive exercise.

 

The value of the research is that it may provide for those who are health care providers with new insights and understandings, and thus further potential options for patients who cannot use physical activity to normalize or enhance their appetite.”

 

Appetite Loss may have a new Treatment Option
For example, many elderly patients often suffer from what is known as “wasting disease.”

 

They become depressed and, combined with a lack of physical activity, lose their appetite and jeopardize their health and well-being.

 

Based on Berk’s current research, these patients may be able to use Laughercise© as an alternative, initially less strenuous, activity to regain their appetite.

 

A similar loss of appetite is often seen in widowers, who typically suffer depression after the loss of a spouse.

 

This often results in decreased immune-system function and subsequent illness in the surviving spouse.

 

Chronic pain patients also suffer from appetite loss due to the chemical changes in their body that cause intolerable discomfort.

 

While laughter may seem unimaginable in the face of deep depression or intense chronic pain, it may be an accessible alternative starting point for these patients to regain appetite and consequently, improve and enhance their recovery to health.

 

Berk’s current research expands the role of laughter on the human body and whole-person care, but also complicates an already complicated emotion.

 

He acknowledges, “I am more amazed by the interrelatedness of laughter and body responses with the more evidence and knowledge we collect. It’s fascinating that positive emotions resulting from behaviors such as music playing or singing, and now mirthful laughter, translate into so many types of [biological] mechanism optimizations.

 

"As the old biblical wisdom states, it may indeed be true that laughter is a good medicine.”

 

Physiology is the study of how molecules, cells, tissues and organs function to create health or disease. The American Physiological Society (APS; www.the-APS.org/press ) has been an integral part of the discovery process since it was established in 1887.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

... ..
...
...

 

 

 

 



Home
Up
Aging News
Seniors Commentary
California Report
Caregiving_News.htm
Community/Workplace
Election 2012
'Smart Bombing' Diseases
Fitness,Health
Grandparents
HealthCare Policy
Hispanic Seniors
Medicare News
Prescription Drug News
Resources, Links
Rural Seniors
Resources, links to seniors agencies, groups
Safety & Security
Seniors' Entertainment
Seniors' Finances
Seniors Relationships
Social Security News
The Virtual Family
Travel News
Veterans Tribute
Privacy Statement
Join Our Mailing List
Aging Resources Store
TSN Video News
Rx for American Health
New Page 12

 

 

Copyright 2000-2013 TodaysSeniorsNetwork

 

Contact Us