thank God I grew up in a silly household
May. 25th, 2003 01:22 amLaughter at Dinner Cuts Blood Sugar in Diabetics
A small study shows that diabetics may be better able to process the sugar they consume during meals if they order a side of laughter with their food.
Laugh if you will, but a group of researchers in Japan found that people with type 2 diabetes -- the most common form of the disease -- had a smaller rise in post-meal blood glucose (sugar) when they watched a comedy show than when they listened to a humorless lecture.
The researchers, led by Dr. Keiko Hayashi from the University of Tsukuba, also found the same results in people without diabetes.
[...] Plenty of studies have shown that laughter can combat many common ills. For instance, research suggests that humor may lower blood pressure and release endorphins.
Laughter is also thought to improve circulation, stimulate the nervous system, heighten the immune system and make the heart stronger.
All of the diabetic patients included in the study had type 2 diabetes, which occurs when the body fails to respond to insulin, the hormone that clears the blood of sugar after a meal and deposits it into cells to use for energy.
During the study, reported in the May issue of the journal Diabetes Care, Hayashi and colleagues measured the blood glucose levels of 19 diabetics and five non-diabetics before and after they ate the same meal, on two separate days.
On one day, participants listened to a 40-minute lecture, which the researchers describe as "monotonous" and "without humorous content." On the second day, participants were included in an audience of 1,000 people who watched a Japanese comedy show.
At the end of the show, "most" participants "considered that they laughed well," the authors note.
The researchers found that post-meal blood glucose levels were higher after the boring lecture than after the comedy show, in diabetics and non-diabetics alike.
Hayashi noted that the reasons why laughter might reduce blood glucose are not clear, but suggested that laughter could increase energy consumption by working the abdominal muscles.
Alternatively, the researcher said, laughter might affect the neuroendocrine system, which controls glucose levels in the blood.
A small study shows that diabetics may be better able to process the sugar they consume during meals if they order a side of laughter with their food.
Laugh if you will, but a group of researchers in Japan found that people with type 2 diabetes -- the most common form of the disease -- had a smaller rise in post-meal blood glucose (sugar) when they watched a comedy show than when they listened to a humorless lecture.
The researchers, led by Dr. Keiko Hayashi from the University of Tsukuba, also found the same results in people without diabetes.
[...] Plenty of studies have shown that laughter can combat many common ills. For instance, research suggests that humor may lower blood pressure and release endorphins.
Laughter is also thought to improve circulation, stimulate the nervous system, heighten the immune system and make the heart stronger.
All of the diabetic patients included in the study had type 2 diabetes, which occurs when the body fails to respond to insulin, the hormone that clears the blood of sugar after a meal and deposits it into cells to use for energy.
During the study, reported in the May issue of the journal Diabetes Care, Hayashi and colleagues measured the blood glucose levels of 19 diabetics and five non-diabetics before and after they ate the same meal, on two separate days.
On one day, participants listened to a 40-minute lecture, which the researchers describe as "monotonous" and "without humorous content." On the second day, participants were included in an audience of 1,000 people who watched a Japanese comedy show.
At the end of the show, "most" participants "considered that they laughed well," the authors note.
The researchers found that post-meal blood glucose levels were higher after the boring lecture than after the comedy show, in diabetics and non-diabetics alike.
Hayashi noted that the reasons why laughter might reduce blood glucose are not clear, but suggested that laughter could increase energy consumption by working the abdominal muscles.
Alternatively, the researcher said, laughter might affect the neuroendocrine system, which controls glucose levels in the blood.