Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Watching Horror Films Can Actually Curdle Your Blood

IANS, 17 Dec, 2015 11:13 AM
    Love watching horror movies? Well, the fear or horror can curdle your blood for real, preparing the body for blood loss during life-threatening situations.
     
    The results suggest that using the term “bloodcurdling” to describe feeling extreme fear while watching horror films is justified, say researchers, adding that scary movies result in an increase in the clotting protein - blood coagulant factor VIII.
     
    To understand this further, researchers in The Netherlands set out to assess whether acute fear can curdle blood.
     
    The study involved 24 healthy volunteers aged 30 years or younger recruited from Leiden University Medical Centre.
     
    Fourteen were assigned to watch a frightening (horror) movie followed by a non-threatening (educational) movie) and 10 to watch the movies in reverse order.
     
    Before and after each movie (within 15 minutes), blood samples were taken and analysed for markers or “fear factors” of clotting activity.
     
    The horror movie was perceived to be more frightening than the educational movie, with a 5.4 mean difference in fear rating scores.
     
    The difference in coagulant factor VIII levels before and after watching the movies was higher for the horror movie than for the educational movie.
     
    "Levels increased in 12 (57 percent) participants during the horror movie, but only in three (14 percent) during the educational movie,” the authors noted.
     
    Levels decreased in 18 (86 percent) participants during the educational movie, but only in nine (43 percent) during the horror movie.
     
    However, the researchers found no effect of either movie on levels of other clot-forming proteins, suggesting that although coagulation is triggered by acute fear, this does not lead to actual clot formation.
     
    The term “bloodcurdling” dates back to medieval times and is based on the concept that fear or horror would “run the blood cold” or “curdle” (congeal) blood.
     
    "Watching bloodcurdling movies is associated with an increase in blood coagulant factor VIII without actual thrombin formation,” the authors concluded in the journal The BMJ.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Buy books, happiness will come free

    Buy books, happiness will come free
    Purchasing books, video games or other experiential products designed to enhance your buying experience can make you just as happy as travelling...

    Buy books, happiness will come free

    Well-educated wives no longer at divorce risk

    Well-educated wives no longer at divorce risk
    Take heart and show some humility if your wife is more educated than you and earns better. With changing times, this may not drive your relationship to the dead end any more....

    Well-educated wives no longer at divorce risk

    Earth missed solar catastrophe just a year back: NASA

    Earth missed solar catastrophe just a year back: NASA
    Just a year ago, on July 23, the Earth missed being hit by a giant solar flare from the most powerful storm on the sun in over 150 years, NASA has said in a sensational revelation.

    Earth missed solar catastrophe just a year back: NASA

    Husband makes wife's 'sexual rejection' list

    Husband makes wife's 'sexual rejection' list
    Next time when you refuse sex to your husband, hide all papers first. A man has prepared a 'sexual rejection' spreadsheet - in three columns - jotting...

    Husband makes wife's 'sexual rejection' list

    Men with wider faces negotiate better

    Men with wider faces negotiate better
    Men with wider faces are better at negotiating when it comes to their own benefit but not so much when the situation requires compromise and collaboration, says a study....

    Men with wider faces negotiate better

    Why obese workers get tired sooner

    Why obese workers get tired sooner
    Workers who are obese may have significantly shorter endurance times when performing workplace tasks, compared with their non-obese counterparts, says a study....

    Why obese workers get tired sooner