Scents Really Can Soothe Stress

Main Category: Anxiety / Stress
Also Included In: Complementary Medicine / Alternative Medicine;  Genetics
Article Date: 23 Jul 2009 - 4:00 PDT

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'Scents Really Can Soothe Stress'

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Feeling stressed? Then try savoring the scent of lemon, mango, lavender, or other fragrant plants. Scientists in Japan are reporting the first scientific evidence that inhaling certain fragrances alter gene activity and blood chemistry in ways that can reduce stress levels. Their study appears in ACS' Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, a bi-weekly publication.

In the new study, Akio Nakamura and colleagues note that people have inhaled the scent of certain plants since ancient times to help reduce stress, fight inflammation and depression, and induce sleep. Aromatherapy, the use of fragrant plant oils to improve mood and health, has become a popular form of alternative medicine today. And linalool is one of the most widely used substances to soothe away emotional stress. Until now, however, linalool's exact effects on the body have been a deep mystery.

The scientists exposed lab rats to stressful conditions while inhaling and not inhaling linalool. Linalool returned stress-elevated levels of neutrophils and lymphocytes - key parts of the immune system - to near-normal levels. Inhaling linalool also reduced the activity of more than 100 genes that go into overdrive in stressful situations. The findings could form the basis of new blood tests for identifying fragrances that can soothe stress, the researchers say.

Article: "Stress Repression in Restrained Rats by (R)-(-)-Linalool Inhalation and Gene Expression Profiling of Their Whole Blood Cells" http://pubs.acs.org/stoken/presspac/presspac/full/10.1021/jf900420g

Source:
Michael Woods
American Chemical Society

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)

Poor Design - should have a fourth group of rats with a stressor paired with an odor they do not expect to be relaxing

posted by Christopher Maute on 3 Aug 2009 at 12:54 pm

The design does not control for the fact that ANY olfactory stimuli would have the same effect as they report for linool. They just assume that r- linool is relaxing, pair it with a stressor, control for no odor, control for no stressor, and report their results as if they have finished controlling for intervening variables. They should have a fourth group of rats with a stressor paired with an odor they do not expect to be relaxing (like phenylethanol) to determine whether the effect they see is linool-specific or olfactory-generic.

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