Lachen
is gezond*
Lachen verbetert de
doorbloeding van de aderen.. Op lange termijn betekent dat minder kans op hart-
en vaatziektes en op infarct, beroerte en embolie. Dat blijkt althans uit
onderzoek van de Amerikaanse cardioloog Michael Miller van de Universiteit van
Maryland. De resultaten werden voorgesteld op een internationaal
cardiologiecongres in de Verenigde Staten.
Twintig vrijwilligers moesten een kwartier lang kijken naar
scènes uit lachfilms Kingpin en There's Something About Mary. Daarna moesten ze
een kwartier lang de deprimerende strandbestorming uit de oorlogsfilm Saving
Private Ryan (1998) aanzien. Ondertussen werd de diameter van de
bovenarmslagader van de proefpersonen en de druk gemeten. De lachfilms hadden
bij 19 van de 20 vrijwilligers een gunstig effect . De ader verwijdde gemiddeld
22 procent sneller dan normaal. Na het zien van het bloedvergieten van Saving
Private Ryan verwijdde de ader 35 procent trager dan normaal. Op het echogram
was bovendien zichtbaar dat de armslagader bij het lachen ontspande en wijder
werd. De betere doorbloeding was tot drie kwartier na het experiment
aantoonbaar.
Een duidelijke verklaring voor dit effect is er niet.
Misschien heeft het iets te maken met het vrijkomen van endorfine. Of misschien
komt er bij het lachen stikstofmonoxide (NO) vrij die de aderwand ontspant.
UNIVERSITY OF
MARYLAND SCHOOL OF MEDICINE STUDY SHOWS LAUGHTER HELPS BLOOD VESSELS FUNCTION
BETTER
Volunteers were
shown funny and disturbing movies to test the effect of emotions on blood
vessels
Using
laughter-provoking movies to gauge the effect of emotions on cardiovascular
health, researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in
Baltimore have shown for the first time that laughter is linked to healthy
function of blood vessels. Laughter appears to cause the tissue that forms the
inner lining of blood vessels, the endothelium, to dilate or expand in order to
increase blood flow.
When the same
group of study volunteers was shown a movie that produced mental stress, their
blood vessel lining developed a potentially unhealthy response called
vasoconstriction, reducing blood flow. That finding confirms previous studies,
which suggested there was a link between mental stress and the narrowing of
blood vessels.
The results of the
study, conducted at the University of Maryland Medical Center, were presented at
the Scientific Session of the American College of Cardiology on March 7, 2005,
in Orlando, Florida.
The endothelium
has a powerful effect on blood vessel tone and regulates blood flow, adjusts
coagulation and blood thickening, and secretes chemicals and other substances in
response to wounds, infections or irritation. It also plays an important role in
the development of cardiovascular disease.
“The endothelium
is the first line in the development of atherosclerosis or hardening of the
arteries, so, given the results of our study, it is conceivable that laughing
may be important to maintain a healthy endothelium, and reduce the risk of
cardiovascular disease,” says principal investigator Michael Miller, M.D.,
director of preventive cardiology at the University of Maryland Medical Center
and associate professor of medicine at the University of Maryland School of
Medicine. “At the very least, laughter offsets the impact of mental stress,
which is harmful to the endothelium.”
The study included
a group of 20 non-smoking, healthy volunteers, equally divided between men and
women, whose average age was 33. The participants had normal blood pressure,
cholesterol and blood glucose levels. Each volunteer was shown part of two
movies at the extreme ends of the emotional spectrum. They were randomized to
first watch either a movie that would cause mental stress, such as the opening
scene of “Saving Private Ryan” (DreamWorks, 1998), or a segment of a movie
that would cause laughter, such as “King Pin” (MGM, 1996). A minimum of 48
hours later, they were shown a movie intended to produce the opposite emotional
extreme.
Prior to seeing a
movie, the volunteers fasted overnight and were given a baseline blood vessel
reactivity test to measure what is known as flow-mediated vasodilation. For that
test, blood flow in the brachial artery in the arm was restricted by a blood
pressure cuff and released. An ultrasound device then measured how well the
blood vessel responded to the sudden increase in flow.
Volunteers watched
a 15-minute segment of the movie while lying down in a temperature-controlled
room. After the movie was shown, the brachial artery was constricted for five
minutes and then released. Again, ultrasound images were acquired. Changes in
blood vessel reactivity after the volunteers watched a movie lasted for at least
30 to 45 minutes. A total of 160 blood vessel measurements were performed before
and after the laughter and mental stress phases of the study.
There were no
differences in the baseline measurements of blood vessel dilation in either the
mental stress or laughter phases. But there were striking contrasts after the
movies were seen. Brachial artery flow was reduced in 14 of the 20 volunteers
following the movie clips that caused mental stress. In contrast, beneficial
blood vessel relaxation or vasodilation was increased in 19 of the 20 volunteers
after they watched the movie segments that generated laughter. Overall, average
blood flow increased 22 percent during laughter, and decreased 35 percent during
mental stress.
Several volunteers
had already seen “Saving Private Ryan,” says Dr. Miller, but even so, some
of them were among the 14 with reduced blood flow.
“The magnitude
of change we saw in the endothelium is similar to the benefit we might see with
aerobic activity, but without the aches, pains and muscle tension associated
with exercise,” says Dr. Miller. “We don’t recommend that you laugh and
not exercise, but we do recommend that you try to laugh on a regular basis.
Thirty minutes of exercise three times a week, and 15 minutes of laughter on a
daily basis is probably good for the vascular system.”
Dr. Miller says
this study was not able to determine the source of laughter’s benefit. “Does
it come from the movement of the diaphragm muscles as you chuckle or guffaw, or
does it come from a chemical release triggered by laughter, such as
endorphins?” he asks. Dr. Miller says a compound called nitric oxide is known
to play a role in the dilation of the endothelium. “Perhaps mental stress
leads to a breakdown in nitric oxide or inhibits a stimulus to produce nitric
oxide that results in vasoconstriction,” says Dr. Miller.
The current study
builds on earlier research Dr. Miller conducted on the potential benefits of
laughter, reported in 2000, which suggested that laughter may be good for the
heart. In that study, answers to questionnaires helped determine whether people
were prone to laughter and ascertain their levels of hostility and anger. Three
hundred volunteers participated in the study. Half of them had suffered a heart
attack or had undergone coronary artery bypass surgery; the other half did not
have heart disease. People with heart disease responded with less humor to
everyday life situations than those with a normal cardiovascular system.
Dr. Miller says
certain factors in the earlier study may have affected the results. For example,
he says it may be that people who have already had a coronary event are not as
laughter-prone as those who do not have heart disease.
He says the
current study sought to eliminate that uncertainty by using volunteers whose
cardiovascular system was healthy. The results of the brachial artery blood flow
measurements, which are precise and objective, appear to make the connection
between laughter and cardiovascular health even stronger, according to Dr.
Miller.
Other researchers
in the study included Charles Mangano, R.D.M.S; Young Park, M.D.; Radha Goel,
M.D.; Gary Plotnick, M.D. and Robert A. Vogel, M.D., all from the University of
Maryland School of Medicine. The study was supported by a grant from the
National Institutes of Health and a Veterans Affairs Merit award to Dr. Miller.
(April 2005)