Just a chuckle a day!
If you're serious about
reducing your heart attack risk, it can seem like a full-time job. You need to
eat right: easy on the fat, fried foods, and red meat. You should exercise
regularly, including plenty of cardiovascular conditioning. And you must
control stress. It's quite a tall order.
Now comes another suggestion that's easier to
follow: Don't
forget to laugh!
Laughter is being called the
latest weapon in the fight against heart disease, ever since University of
Maryland researchers reported at an American Heart Association meeting in
November that heart-healthy people are more likely than those with heart
disease to laugh frequently and heartily, and to use humor to smooth over
awkward situations. There's even hope, the scientists say, for cranky people
who rarely laugh and for those without a sense of humor: They can learn.
In the study, Michael Miller, MD, director of
the Center
for Preventive Cardiology at the University of Maryland Medical Center, Baltimore, and his colleagues asked 150 people
who had suffered heart attacks or undergone heart bypass surgery for their
reactions to situations such as arriving at a party to find someone wearing
identical clothing, or having a drink spilled on them by a waiter. They
compared the responses -- and especially their tendency to laugh -- to those
from 150 healthy control subjects (matched for age) without heart problems. Turns out that the
healthy people were more likely to laugh often and to use humor to get out of
uncomfortable situations. Those with heart disease, on the other hand, were 40%
less likely to laugh in those situations.
The value of a laugh!
Exactly how laughter may
protect the heart isn't entirely understood, says Miller. But some evidence
suggests that the effects of a chortle, snicker, or guffaw include reduction in
stress hormones such as cortisol, and reduction in blood pressure. That in turn
may reduce heart disease risk. It is known that mental stress can impair the
endothelium, the protective barrier lining the blood vessels, Miller says.
Besides those physiological effects, Miller
says, there may be additional mechanisms to explain why laughter is good for
your heart and your health. He hopes to discover more during his next study,
scheduled to start in the spring.
The setting in which you
laugh may be important, says Adam N. Clark, MD,
a fellow in cardiology at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, and a co-author of the study. Usually, you
laugh in a group or with at least one other person (although Clark is quick to
point out there's nothing wrong with a good belly laugh when you're by
yourself). But
the social aspect of laughing may be a plus, Clark says, because isolation can
be associated with depression.
A short history of therapeutic
laughter:
The concept of laughter being good medicine
isn't new, of course. It was mentioned in the Old Testament. ("A merry
heart doeth good like a medicine, but a broken spirit drieth the bones."
Proverbs 17:22.) And it's been more than two decades since the late
magazine editor Norman
Cousins published his 1979 "Anatomy of an
Illness," in which he describes how he was diagnosed with ankylosing
spondylitis, a painful rheumatic disease, and how he managed it partly
by watching funny videos. Now there's more scientific evidence to
buttress Cousins' intuition.
What a good laugh can do?
Lee Berk, DrPh, a pioneer in
laughter studies, says laughter has been found to decrease or attenuate cortisol and
other "distress" hormones, although not everyone agrees. And laughter
may improve the immune system, adds Berk, associate director of the Center of
Neuroimmunology at Loma Linda
University School of Medicine and associate professor of health
promotion and education in the university's School of Public Health. In his oft-quoted
study, published in the American Journal of the
Medical Sciences in December 1989, he found that laughter is a good kind of
stress: It reduces blood levels of cortisol, epinephrine, and other substances.
Increased cortisol and epinephrine levels tend to suppress the immune system,
so decreasing their levels is believed to be beneficial.
Laughter may go a long way
to reducing pain, too. At UCLA, a five-year program called UCLA/Rx
Laughter, in which researchers
are studying the effects humorous videos have on young patients' perception of
pain, is entering its second year, funded in part by TV's Comedy Central.
Laughter also may help a
patient who already has had a heart attack, Berk says. In a
study he and his colleagues presented at the 4th International Conference on Preventive
Cardiology in 1997, 24 cardiac
rehabilitation patients who watched a 30-minute funny video each day for a year
had fewer heart attacks than 24 cardiac patients who did not watch such videos.
In the video-watching group, only two had subsequent heart attacks, compared to
10 in the other group.
It would be easy enough to
add laughter to a traditional cardiac rehabilitation program, says Veronica
Polverari, RN, board certified in
holistic nursing and manager of cardiac rehabilitation services for Santa
Monica-UCLA Medical Center. Currently, many programs include
lifestyle modifications such as having people watch what they eat and exercise
more. Adding
advice on how to laugh more would be simple, Polverari says.
Learning the art of laughter:
Laughing more often and
seeing humor in stressful situations can be learned. Larry Wilde,
a former standup comedian who founded the Carmel (Calif.) Institute of Humor, makes a
living as a motivational humorist, teaching people to laugh. At 72, he says he is free of heart
disease. Wilde hosts laughter-boosting conferences for corporations,
associations, and healthcare providers. He also has a web site that offers mini
lessons. Among the titles: Up Your Laugh Quotient ("Embrace the notion that humor
is not incompatible with dignity and stature.") Wilde uses his
own sense of humor to make others laugh: On the phone with a reporter, he says,
"Why don't you come to dinner?' Told that the reporter lives more than 300
miles away, he isn't fazed. "We'll send down a jet." Which, of course,
makes the reporter laugh.)
You also can improve your
sense of humor on your own, Miller says:
- Place a photo of a family event that makes you smile or laugh, or a clipping of a magazine or newspaper cartoon that made you giggle, in plain view.
- Realize that humor is subjective. Figure out what you think is funny and expose yourself to it. "My wife thinks Seinfeld is funny," Miller says. "I don't. I think The Honeymooners is funny, but my wife doesn't."
- Consider gathering a group of friends and engaging in an activity that no one excels at. It could be ice-skating, tennis, or basketball. The point, Miller says, is that if everyone is equally bad, you'll soon be laughing at yourselves.
Finally, for Valentine's
Day: Buy your loved one a funny video instead of artery-clogging chocolates.
WebMD, February 5, 2001
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Much Love, Dr.Shermaine #InformativeRead #PleaseShare #HealthyBodySoulAndSpirit #IWantYou2Live
"It's Not Selfish
to Love Yourself, Take Care of Yourself and to Make Your Happiness a Priority.
It's a Necessity." (Mandy Hale)
"Self-Care is Not Selfish. You Cannot Serve From an Empty Vessel." (Eleanor Brown)
“A day without laughter
is a day wasted.” (Charlie Chaplin)
“Always find a reason to
laugh. It may not add years to your life but it will surely add life to your
years.”
“Laughter is an instant
vacation.” (Milton Berle)
“Always laugh, it’s
cheap medicine.” (Lord Byron)
“Through humor, you can
soften some of the worst blows that life delivers. And once you find laughter,
no matter how painful your situation might be, you can survive.” (Billy Cosby)
“People who laugh
actually live longer than those who don’t laugh. Few persons realize that
health actually varies according to the amount of laughter.” (James J. Walsh)
“If we couldn’t laugh we
would all go insane.” (Robert Frost)
“Laugh loudly, laugh
often, and most important, laugh at yourself.” (Chelsea Handler)
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