Scottish Daily Mail

Why falling in love is good for blood pressure

- By ROGER DOBSON

FALLING in love can make the world seem a better place — but it can also have a major impact on your health.

A wealth of new research has found that romance can help improve a range of conditions, from high blood pressure to pain and allergic reactions.

Falling in love is the result of activity in 12 areas of the brain working together, according to researcher­s at the University of Western Virginia in California. They say the first changes in brain activity begin within one-fifth of a second of becoming smitten.

There is a surge of chemicals such as dopamine, which helps to regulate emotional responses, and oxytocin, the ‘cuddle hormone’ that induces feelings of trust and reduces anxiety.

This may explain why a study in the Annals of Behavioral Medicine found that people in love tend to have lower blood pressure.

It is thought hormones released by touch are likely to play a role — pressure centres in the skin are in contact with the brain through the vagus nerve, which runs down the body. One theory is that stimulatio­n of the vagus triggers an increase in oxytocin.

‘Important life events, such as falling in love, have profound physiologi­cal effects as well as emotional ones,’ says Professor Sir Cary Cooper, a psychologi­st at the University of Manchester.

‘The immune system, hormones and many other factors are likely to be involved.’

Falling in love can also have an effect on our ability to fight off infections. Research from a study of 50 women found that those who fell in love during the twoyear study had genetic changes linked to higher concentrat­ions of compounds that attack viruses, reported the journal Psychoneur­oendocrino­logy.

It is thought that altered levels of dopamine, which research suggests links the nervous and immune systems, may be involved.

Romance can improve your pain threshold, too. Researcher­s at Stanford University in California used brain scans to assess responses to pain — in the form of a hot probe on the hand — while people looked at photos. When they looked at a picture of their loved one, self-reported pain dropped by 40 per cent. There was no such drop with pictures of an acquaintan­ce.

Just looking at a loved one may increase production of dopamine, which triggers the release of natural painkiller­s. ‘When patients are doing markedly better and we find out they are in a new passionate relationsh­ip, it may be nothing to do with the medication,’ the researcher­s reported in the journal PLOS in 2010.

Then there are the benefits of kissing. A 2006 study in the Journal of Psychosoma­tic Research found that 30 minutes of kissing reduced the production of histamine — a chemical pumped out in response to an allergen — which triggers allergy symptoms.

COUPLES who kiss each other the most have lower levels of cholestero­l. A 2013 study, published in the Scandinavi­an Journal of Public Health, found that couples told to increase the time they spent kissing over six weeks had improved cholestero­l levels.

One theory is that during a kiss there may be an exchange of sebum, an oily substance secreted by the skin, which may reduce levels of the stress hormone cortisol, so lowering cholestero­l.

Meanwhile, hugging your loved one can lower blood pressure and reduce heart rate due to increased levels of oxytocin, according to a study in the journal Comprehens­ive Psychology.

Another study at the University of California showed that people who were regularly hugged by their partner were less likely to be depressed or anxious.

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