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 Appeared in CNN.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- Laughter may be the best medicine, but even
looking forward to having a good laugh can boost the immune system and
reduce stress, U.S. researchers reported on Wednesday.
Just anticipating a happy, funny event can raise levels of endorphins and
other pleasure and relaxation-inducing hormones and lower production of
stress hormones, a team at the University of California Irvine said.
"This stuff is real," Lee Berk, an assistant professor of family medicine
and researcher in complementary and alternative medicine who led the
study, said in a telephone interview.
"This study shows that even knowing you will be involved in a positive
humorous event days in advance reduces levels of stress hormones in the
blood and increases levels of chemicals known to aid relaxation," he said.
His team tested 16 men who all agreed they thought a certain videotape was
funny. Half of them were told three days in advance they would watch it.
Those who knew in advance they would see the video started experiencing
biological changes right away, Berk told a meeting of the Society for
Neuroscience in Orlando, Florida.
When the men watched the video, levels of cortisol, a stress hormone, fell
39 percent, Berk found. Epinephrine, also known as adrenaline, fell 70
percent, while levels of the feel-good hormone endorphin rose 27 percent
and growth hormone levels rose by 87 percent.
"Growth hormone is very beneficial to the immune system," Berk said.
This all suggests that anticipation of a funny event can lower stress and
stimulate the immune system, Berk said.
He said he had to work with a small group of similar men because he could
not decide for them what would be funny. "Say you can't stand Laurel and
Hardy -- watching a slapstick Laurel and Hardy video would be stressful
for you," he said.
"This group picked a fellow who uses the 'sledgeamatic' -- a big
sledgehammer and smashes fruit," Berk added.
Berk and others had already shown that actually watching a funny video, or
just laughing at a joke, could make healthful changes in the levels of
hormones involved in stress and lower blood pressure. In 2000 a team at
the University of Maryland reported that people who reported using humor
more often were less likely to have had heart attacks.
But this is the first time that someone has shown anticipation of having
fun has similar effects, Berk said.
"You have been thinking about it all day, so you experience a change in
biology even before you get there," Berk said. "That is therapeutic."
Berk said the finding strengthens the advice that everyone lighten up a
little to live longer. "Anticipation is half or two-thirds the fun,"
he said.

November 7, 2002.
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