Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Fear lurks in the gut

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 23 May, 2014 01:17 PM
    You may have noticed your stomach tying itself in knots and heart beating faster when faced with a long deserted road while driving or sound of footsteps as you walk alone in the dark. The fear often lurks in the gut.
     
    Now, researchers have been able to prove for the first time that our ‘gut instinct’ has a significant impact on how we react to fear.
     
    “The innate response to fear appears to be influenced significantly by signals sent from the stomach to the brain,” said Urs Meyer, a researcher from Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich (ETHZ), Switzerland.
     
    At the heart of this dialogue between the brain and abdomen is the vagus nerve that transmits signals in both directions - from the brain to our internal organs and from the stomach back to our brain.
     
    In experiments over rats, Meyer and his team turned this two-way communication into a one-way street - enabling the researchers to get to the bottom of the role played by gut instinct.
     
    In the test animals, the brain was still able to control processes in the abdomen, but no longer received any signals from the other direction.
     
    Nevertheless, the loss of their gut instinct did not make the rats completely fearless.
     
    In a conditioning experiment, the rats learnt to link a neutral acoustic stimulus - a sound - to an unpleasant experience.
     
    If the researchers switched from a negative to a neutral stimulus, the rats without gut instinct required significantly longer to associate the sound with the new, neutral situation.
     
    “This also fits with the results of a recently published study conducted by other researchers, which found that stimulation of the vagus nerve facilitates relearning,” Meyer noted.
     
    The results show clearly that the stomach also has a say in how we respond to fear, researchers concluded.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Alcohol, drugs together put kids at higher driving risk

    Alcohol, drugs together put kids at higher driving risk
    Teenagers who drink alcohol and smoke marijuana together may be at increased risk for unsafe driving, a study shows.

    Alcohol, drugs together put kids at higher driving risk

    New diabetes, obesity drug: Indian-American's promising research

    New diabetes, obesity drug: Indian-American's promising research
    Two researchers at Indiana University, including an Indian-American, are leading the way towards developing a new potential non-insulin drug for diabetes and obesity, which needs to be taken only once a week.

    New diabetes, obesity drug: Indian-American's promising research

    Build super muscles with soy-dairy protein

    Build super muscles with soy-dairy protein
    Not happy with gym results on your muscles? Try a blend of soy and dairy proteins after resistance exercises as this has now been touted as the best way to build muscle mass.

    Build super muscles with soy-dairy protein

    'Love hormone' bonds animals like humans

    'Love hormone' bonds animals like humans
    And you thought you had a patent on 'love hormone' when it comes to showing affection! Dogs too have oxytocin and release it in a good quantity when in love or looking for bonding.

    'Love hormone' bonds animals like humans

    Can you believe it? Metabolism existed even before origin of life, reveales study

    Can you believe it? Metabolism existed even before origin of life, reveales study
    The mystery behind how the first organisms on earth could have become metabolically active has been unlocked.

    Can you believe it? Metabolism existed even before origin of life, reveales study

    Fly's genome study offers hope for sleeping sickness

    Fly's genome study offers hope for sleeping sickness
    With genome decoding of tsetse fly that causes the potentially fatal sleeping sickness disease, scientists have discovered new clues to the diet, vision and reproductive strategies of the insect.

    Fly's genome study offers hope for sleeping sickness