Love watching horror movies? Well, the fear or horror
can curdle your blood for real, preparing the body for blood loss during
life-threatening situations.
The results suggest
that using the term “bloodcurdling” to describe feeling extreme fear
while watching horror films is justified, say researchers, adding that
scary movies result in an increase in the clotting protein — blood
coagulant factor VIII.
Researchers in the Netherlands
set out to assess whether acute fear can curdle blood. The study
involved 24 healthy volunteers aged 30 years or younger recruited from
Leiden University Medical Centre. Fourteen were assigned to watch a
frightening (horror) movie followed by a non-threatening (educational)
movie and 10 to watch the movies in reverse order. Before and after each
movie (within 15 minutes), blood samples were taken and analysed for
markers or “fear factors” of clotting activity.
The
horror movie was perceived to be more frightening than the educational
movie, with a 5.4 mean difference in fear rating scores. The difference
in coagulant factor VIII levels before and after watching the movies was
higher for the horror movie than for the educational movie.
“Levels
increased in 12 (57 per cent) participants during the horror movie, but
only in three (14 per cent) during the educational movie,” the authors
noted.
Levels decreased in 18 (86 per cent)
participants during the educational movie, but only in nine (43 per
cent) during the horror movie.
However,
the researchers found no effect of either movie on levels of other
clot-forming proteins, suggesting that although coagulation is triggered
by acute fear, this does not lead to actual clot formation. “Watching
bloodcurdling movies is associated with an increase in blood coagulant
factor VIII without actual thrombin formation,” the authors concluded in
the journal
The BMJ
. — IANS
Source :- The Hindu, 18-Dec-2015
No comments:
Post a Comment