logo

English
                 

 

This Is the Fastest Way to Calm Down

 

Deep breathing is the go-to solution for stress-filled situations. Now researchers have discovered the biological reason why breathing can calm you.

ALICE PARK @ALICEPARKNY

MAR 31, 2017 4:54 PM EDT

When people are anxious before getting surgery, doctors and nurses often tell them to take slow, deep breaths with long exhalations. It may seem like an inadequate way to quell anxiety, but in many cases, it actually works.

 

Now scientists describe why deep breathing, including the breath-focus of meditation, can induce such calm and tranquility. In a paper published in Science, researchers led by Mark Krasnow, a professor of biochemistry at Stanford University, found that in mice, a group of nerves in the brain that regulates breathing has a direct connection to the arousal center of the brain. In other words, breathing can have a direct effect on the overall activity level of the brain.

Krasnow’s team has been studying a group of 3,000 neurons in the brain stems of rodents that control all of a mouse’s different breathing patterns, from the quick, rapid breathing associated with exertion and excitement, to the slower breathing typical of rest, to sighing and crying. Krasnow found that about 60 types of nerve cells make up this so-called “breathing pacemaker”, and each of these nerve cell groups are responsible for different breathing patterns.

 

In the study, the group was trying to isolate the different types of neurons and their various effects on breathing. Using a genetic technique, they silenced specific neurons to see what breathing function was disturbed. Their first experiment seemed like a failure when the researchers manipulated one set of neurons, yet the mice didn’t show any changes in their breathing. “We were very disappointed initially,” says Krasnow.

They put aside that experiment and moved the manipulated animals to a new cage environment. But that’s when they noticed something novel. Normally, moving mice makes them nervous and obsessive about exploring their new surroundings. But instead of sniffing and running around, the mice with the changes in their breathing center seemed to “chill,” says Krasnow. They continued their at-rest behavior: grooming themselves and hanging out without a need to urgently investigate their new surroundings.

It turns out that Krasnow had disrupted a set of nerves with a direct line to the brain’s arousal center; these nerves can either tell the brain there’s an emergency and set off the body’s alarms, or keep the brain on an even keel, maintaining a sense of calm. This is the change that happens when breathing slows down, says Krasnow. “This liaison to the rest of the brain means that if we can slow breathing down, as we can do by deep breathing or slow controlled breaths, the idea would be that these neurons then don’t signal the arousal center, and don’t hyperactivate the brain. So you can calm your breathing and also calm your mind,” says Krasnow.

 

Breathing, in other words, can change the mind, or the state of the mind.

So why do some people still feel anxious after a few deep inhales and exhales? It’s possible that their genetic variations mean they have a dulled response to this cluster of nerves responsible for regulating breathing, so that it takes more than conscious deep breaths to switch the brain from an aroused to a calm state. In those cases, having something like a drug or other intervention to specifically target the right group of breathing nerve cells and control its activity might be needed. That’s where Krasnow hopes the work will lead: to a way to better control the calming effect that deep breathing can have on the brain. In the meantime, he says, don’t dismiss deep breathing as a way to combat stress and anxiety. There’s now a scientific explanation for why it works.

No. Subject Date Author Last Update Views
Notice How to write your comments onto a webpage [2] 2016.07.06 운영자 2016.11.20 18192
Notice How to Upload Pictures in webpages 2016.07.06 운영자 2018.10.19 32343
Notice How to use Rich Text Editor [3] 2016.06.28 운영자 2018.10.19 5919
Notice How to Write a Webpage 2016.06.28 운영자 2020.12.23 43838
8122 [Notice] KAMA Seoul Convention 2011.04.12 운영자 2011.04.12 8578
8121 "Hope Has A Place" by Enya [4] 2010.01.31 운영자 2010.01.31 8574
8120 "Solitude" by Paulo Coelho [4] 2014.04.11 이한중*65 2014.04.11 8573
8119 2010-2011 동창회 Research Grant 신청요강 2010.07.28 의대동창회 2010.07.28 8572
8118 Detroit Gourmet Club을 소개합니다 [7] 2010.04.02 이민우*67 2010.04.02 8571
8117 Machu Picchu Ruins, Peru - (4) [1] 2011.04.21 이기우*71문리대 2011.04.21 8570
8116 Grandma, Grandpa and Me [7] 2010.01.25 Sukjoo#65 2010.01.25 8564
8115 '제2의 김연아' 탄생에 가슴 부푼 피겨계 [4] 2010.01.10 황규정*65 2010.01.10 8564
8114 The Ugly Koreans - 내가 본 그 위대한 세대 [6] 2010.08.30 Rover 2010.08.30 8563
8113 일본 쓰나미 가장 생생한 동영상 공개 [4] 2011.05.05 Rover 2011.05.05 8554
8112 "데브다스" (내 친구교수의 글) [2] 2009.09.07 유석희*72 2009.09.07 8554
8111 [Movie Review] 영화 "울지마, 톤즈" - 신잉기 글 [2] 2010.12.26 Rover 2010.12.26 8552
8110 La Wally [2] 2009.09.01 Sukjoo 2009.09.01 8551
8109 The War in KOREA, 1981 [7] 2010.07.31 한원민*65 2010.07.31 8550
8108 Happy Father's Day! [6] 2011.06.19 조승자#65 2011.06.19 8549
8107 Ian Cameron's Photography [1] 2010.02.11 YonnieC#65 2010.02.11 8549
8106 Death Valley National Park [6] 2011.02.02 조의열*66 2011.02.02 8546
8105 [서울의대동문 터키 여행기] 7, Istanbul 2 & Epilogue [3] 2010.11.16 황규정*65 2010.11.16 8546
8104 덜 공개된 6. 25 사진(2) [4] 2010.05.06 한원민*65 2010.05.06 8546
8103 [re] Autumn in Colorado - 개별 사진 설명 version [2] 2010.09.22 운영자 2010.09.22 8536