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Sunday, April 6, 2025

YOUR DAI­LY HEALTH

Study: Regular relaxation beneficial to your genes

by

20130506

While it might seem that your body and brain aren't do­ing much when you're on break, re­lax­ing trig­gers a flur­ry of ge­net­ic ac­tiv­i­ty that is re­spon­si­ble for some im­por­tant health ben­e­fits.

When you re­al­ly re­lax–us­ing any type of med­i­ta­tive tech­nique such as deep breath­ing, yo­ga or prayer–the genes in your body switch to a dif­fer­ent mode.

Genes that coun­ter­act the chem­i­cal ef­fects of stress kick in, while those re­spon­si­ble for dri­ving more anx­ious and alert states take a back seat. And a new study shows that long-term prac­tise of re­lax­ation tech­niques can sig­nif­i­cant­ly en­hance these ge­net­ic ben­e­fits.

Dr Her­bert Ben­son, di­rec­tor emer­i­tus of the Ben­son-Hen­ry In­sti­tute and an as­so­ciate pro­fes­sor of med­i­cine at Har­vard Med­ical School, first de­fined the re­lax­ation re­sponse in the ear­ly 1970s and led the lat­est ge­net­ic in­ves­ti­ga­tion pub­lished in the jour­nal PLOS One.

"We have with­in us an in­nate, in­born ca­pac­i­ty that coun­ters the harm­ful ef­fects of stress," said Ben­son. "And this study has shown its ge­nom­ic ba­sis: name­ly that spe­cif­ic hubs of genes are changed when peo­ple evoke this re­lax­ation re­sponse."

"It's fan­tas­tic," says Dr Mladen Gol­u­bic, med­ical di­rec­tor of the Cen­ter for Lifestyle Med­i­cine at the Cleve­land Clin­ic, who was not as­so­ci­at­ed with the study.

While oth­er stud­ies have linked the re­lax­ation re­sponse to low­er stress lev­els and re­duced blood pres­sure, the cur­rent trail de­tails the phys­i­o­log­i­cal path­ways re­spon­si­ble for pro­duc­ing these ben­e­fits.

In the cur­rent study, Ben­son and his col­leagues stud­ied 52 peo­ple, half of whom had med­i­tat­ed for four to 20 years us­ing re­lax­ation tech­niques and half of whom were novices. Both groups had their blood tak­en and analysed be­fore and af­ter a 20-minute re­lax­ation ses­sion in which they used a CD for guid­ance.

The new med­i­taters agreed to par­tic­i­pate in two re­lax­ation ses­sions; in the first, they lis­tened to a CD that pro­vid­ed gen­er­al health in­for­ma­tion un­re­lat­ed to stress, which served as a con­trol. That way, the re­searchers could com­pare any mol­e­c­u­lar changes cap­tured in their blood af­ter they learned deep breath­ing, mind­ful­ness and mantra prac­tice, which in­volved fo­cus­ing their mind on a sin­gle re­peat­ed word while ig­nor­ing dis­trac­tions.

Af­ter these ses­sions, the sci­en­tists iden­ti­fied four sets of changes in the way genes were ex­pressed; these al­ter­ations on­ly oc­curred af­ter the par­tic­i­pants used re­lax­ation tech­niques.

The first in­volved genes re­lat­ed to mi­to­chon­dria, the bat­ter­ies that pow­er the cell. "These changes lead to (mi­to­chon­dria) be­ing more sta­ble and more con­trolled," Ben­son said.

That made sense, said Gol­u­bic, since "we know that peo­ple en­gaged in med­i­ta­tion re­port bet­ter moods, more en­er­gy and that they sleep bet­ter."

Genes linked to in­sulin pro­duc­tion were al­so af­fect­ed, with the re­lax­ation re­sponse boost­ing lev­els of the hor­mone that is al­so in­volved in en­er­gy me­tab­o­lism.

Med­i­ta­tion al­so af­fect­ed genes re­lat­ed to telom­eres, which cap off the ends of chro­mo­somes to pro­tect and ex­tend the lives of cells. "The short­er the telom­ere, the more the ag­ing process is man­i­fest," Ben­son said.

The re­searchers al­so saw less ac­tiv­i­ty in genes re­lat­ed to in­flam­ma­tion; in oth­er stud­ies, these genes were over-ex­pressed in pa­tients with hy­per­ten­sion, heart dis­ease and can­cer. The da­ta sug­gest that med­i­ta­tion, or reg­u­lar re­lax­ation, can down­play the ac­tiv­i­ty of these genes and po­ten­tial­ly coun­ter­act some of the phys­i­o­log­ic process­es that dri­ve them.

All of these changes were seen to a much greater ex­tent in the ex­pe­ri­enced med­i­taters than in the novices. But those new to the prac­tice al­so showed dif­fer­ences af­ter on­ly two months of train­ing.

"The re­lax­ation re­sponse is best un­der­stood as the op­po­site of stress or the fight-or-flight re­sponse," said Ben­son, "There are two steps gen­er­al­ly used in evok­ing it. One is rep­e­ti­tion. The rep­e­ti­tion can be of a word, sound, prayer, phrase or move­ment. The oth­er is that when oth­er thoughts come to mind, you dis­re­gard them and go back to the rep­e­ti­tion."

Ben­son rec­om­mends prac­tis­ing the tech­nique for ten to 20 min­utes, at least once a day.

(Time.com)

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