Can Love cure disease? Is it the miracle cure for some respiratory diseases?
By: Dr. Richard L. Robles, D.C.
It has been well established that a heightened emotional state stimulates your body to be on the defenses. Love (compassion) and anger both stimulate an initial increase in the immune system. However, with negative emotions, such as anger, this benefit soon wears off and actually acts as an immunosuppressor. Positive emotions, such as caring, compassion, & love, cause a sustained increase in immuno-defenses, and can even counteract the impact of negative emotions.(1)
Immunoglobulin A (IgA), is an important part of the body's first line of defense of the mucosal surfaces of the gastrointestinal (mouth, throat, stomach & intestines), respiratory (mouth, throat, trachea, & lungs), and genitourinary (urethra, ureter, bladder) tracts (2). These tracts are common sites for potential infections, such as the common cold, the flu, bronchitis, RSV, E. Coli infections, Urinary Tract Infections, and STD's (just to name a few).
The serum and salivary concentrations of IgA are important to the overall immunologic protection of the mucosal tracts. Decreased levels of IgA have been associated with a variety of diseases including recurrent infections, allergies, and neoplastic and autoimmune diseases (3). Longer periods of decreased IgA levels will typically result in the insidious onset of disease with an increased likelihood toward chronicity. Historically, diseases that appear slowly and unexpectedly over time without a clear vector of transmission typically have multi-faceted causes that stem from lifestyle stresses that may or may not be the choice of the diseased individual. Two such diseases are diabetes and asthma.
Consider that asthma typically develops as the result of a prolonged, increased and inappropriate immune response in the mucosal tissues of the airways. Researchers have yet to name a cause for the inappropriate immune response that triggers asthma symptoms and a permanent cure continues to evade the best scientific minds. The most popular treatments of today do not fix the cause, but attempt to prevent life-threatening symptoms from occurring.
Emotional stress can trigger mild to severe asthmatic symptoms. To prove that prolonged emotional distress causes this inappropriate immune response requires too many variables to be properly determined using current scientific methodology. Similarly, it would be difficult to establish a link between a single experience of anger and a subsequent infection or allergic reaction; however, it is worth noting that an opportunistic agent is more likely to take root with the first line of defense significantly decreased during the 2-5 post-episodic hours. Now, consider a child whose immune system is still developing. What effect would his/her experience of the peaks and valleys of fluctuating IgA levels related to consistent emotional distress (anger or other abusive negative emotions) have on the function of that childs immune system? The answer to that question would no doubt lead to the identification of one of the causes of prolonged, increased and inappropriate immune responses in the mucosal tissues of the airways of children.
Compare that with what we know about diabetes. Diabetes is predisposed by several lifestyle factors that stress our bodys digestive system to the point of inappropriate control of blood sugar. This is largely due to the fluctuation of blood sugar levels as a result of an individuals diet and physical activity over the course of many years. I propose that similar to the multi-faceted cause of diabetes, asthma symptoms are the result of multi-faceted stressors of the body such as emotional distress. As the child matures physically, they also mature emotionally. This maturity along with the maturation of the immune system can explain why some children grow out of asthma.
Can love cure respiratory disease? This remains to be answered, but it is likely that love can help prevent respiratory and other mucosal disease. A healthy immune system prevents infection and disease; therefore, loves positive affect on the mucosal tracts immune systems first line of defense must help prevent infections and diseases of the mucosal surfaces of the body.
References:
1) Rein G, Atkinson M, & McCraty R, The Physiological and Psychological Effects of Compassion and Anger, Journal of Advancement in Medicine. 1995; 8(2): 87-105.
2) Woof JM, Kerr MA, The function of immunoglobulin A in immunity, The Journal of Pathology, 2006 Jan;208(2):270-82.
3) Pilette C, Durham SR, Vaerman J-P, & Yves Sibille Y, Mucosal Immunity in Asthma and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: A Role for Immunoglobulin A?, The Proceedings of the American Thoracic Society 1:125-135 (2004).