Being relaxed could be the key to healing quickly, scientists have discovered.
Telegraph.co.uk, 7:30AM BST 10 Jun 2010
Laid-back people can heal up to twice as rapidly as those who are very stressed, research indicates.
Scientists inflicted small ''punch'' wounds on healthy volunteers whose levels of life stress were assessed using a standard questionnaire.
Changes in levels of the stress hormone cortisol reflected the differences in healing speed.
A similar pattern emerged from an analysis of pooled data from 22 studies by different research groups examining stress and wound healing.
Professor John Weinman, from the Institute of Psychiatry at King's College London, presented the findings at the Cheltenham Science Festival.
Previously, he showed that wound healing can be enhanced by psychological help aimed at addressing emotional stress.
Prof Weinman said: ''My overall research interests are focused on investigating and assessing how patients perceive illness and treatment, and how this affects the way they respond to and recover from a range of physical health problems.
''These studies focus specifically on how the life stresses people experience can impact on their ability to recover from different types of wound, such as those caused by surgical procedures and by different medical conditions, including venous leg ulcers.
''I hope that these findings can now be used to identify psychological interventions to help speed up the recovery and healing process.''
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