
Za 50 USD możesz przejść do trybu online i kupić 60-mililitrową butelkę aerozolu do nosa zawierającą oksytocynę, naturalnie występujący hormon wytwarzany w ludzkim mózgu .
Ponieważ spray nie jest zatwierdzony przez Amerykańską Agencję ds.Żywności i Leków, nie może być sprzedawany jako lekarstwo lub lekarstwo na nic szczególnego. Ale jeśli śledziłeś nagłówki gazet w ciągu ostatniej dekady, wiesz, że oksytocyna - hormon odpowiedzialny głównie za wywoływanie skurczów u kobiet w ciąży i wypuszczanie mleka podczas laktacji - również zwiększa poczucie więzi społecznej i poprawia towarzyskość u ludzi. z autyzmem.
Jak obiecują producenci sprayu do nosa: „Nie będziesz już zmęczony interakcjami społecznymi, a raczej zyskasz umiejętność czerpania z nich przyjemności. Będziesz mógł odczytywać emocje z twarzy ludzi, patrzeć w oczy innych bez mrugnięcia okiem. empatyczny sposób ”.
Empatia i kontakt wzrokowy są wspaniałe, ale oksytocyna ma też bardziej seksowną stronę. Wykazano, że poziom oksytocyny gwałtownie wzrasta podczas orgazmu , a osoby, którym podano dodatkową oksytocynę, mają cieplejsze, bardziej mętne uczucia wobec swoich małżonków i partnerów. Nowi kochankowie mają również wyższy poziom naturalnej oksytocyny niż ich samotni rówieśnicy. Dzięki temu oksytocyna zyskała chwytliwy przydomek „hormon miłości”.
But while decades of research have proven that oxytocin clearly has a role in bonding us to our social and sexual partners, it's not a magic bullet — or magic nasal spritz — to achieve romantic bliss. Experts warn that there's still plenty to learn about the popular neuropeptide, and that oxytocin is likely not the only ingredient in the complex biochemical soup we call love.
Which Came First, the Hormone or the Happiness?
Dr. Bradley Anawalt is chief of medicine at the University of Washington Medical Center and board-certified in endocrinology (a hormone specialist). He's had a front row seat as scientists have uncovered oxytocin's curious effects on brain chemistry and human behavior.
Anawalt cites studies showing that doses of intranasal oxytocin light up the same reward centers in the brain as sexual arousal, chocolate cake and drugs like cocaine. That people treated with oxytocin are more attracted to images of faces that resemble their spouse. And that men in relationships will stand farther back from an attractive stranger when under the influence of extra oxytocin.
But Anawalt says it's important to distinguish that in most of these studies, the administration of oxytocin nasal spray doesn't make the recipient "fall in love" with anyone. It's more accurate to say that the extra dose of the hormone "enhances our emotional reaction" to people with whom we are already romantically or socially bonded.
Anawalt points to the study in which men in committed relationships treated with oxytocin preferred to stand farther away from an attractive research assistant compared to those treated with placebo. The study authors concluded that oxytocin might play a role in promoting monogamy in men. For Anawalt, the question is whether the oxytocin influences monogamy by enhancing sexual attraction or by reinforcing social expectations.
"If I'm bonded to a female partner, that means I love that person or I'm strongly attracted to her, and my feelings for that person are accentuated by the oxytocin and therefore I respond differently to her than to other women," says Anawalt. "That's one plausible explanation."
"Another explanation is that oxytocin is simply reinforcing a social relationship I have with somebody. I'm supposed to be with my female partner and I'm not supposed to be with this other woman."
I'll Read What She's Reading
Oxytocin is a neurotransmitter and hormone that is produced by the hypothalamus in the brain. It is released during sex, breastfeeding and childbirth, all activities that have to do with bonding. It could be nature's way of promoting families by reinforcing positive feelings with people we are already physically close to.
Researchers have tested natural oxytocin levels in the blood of both men and women before, during and after sexual activities, and oxytocin levels go up as arousal increases.
During orgasm, oxytocin likely plays a similar role that it does in childbirth. Upon orgasm, a flood of oxytocin into the bloodstream triggers smooth muscle contractions in the uterus and pelvic muscles.
Anawalt mentions that body massage has also been shown to increase natural oxytocin levels in the bloodstream, another sign that physical pleasure is mediated by oxytocin in some way. But he's quick to point out that oxytocin is more than just another "O" word.
"The flipside of this is that reading a good book also increases oxytocin," says Anawalt. "It may be that a relaxed state or a general state of pleasure is associated with high oxytocin levels."
When Bonding Goes Bad
There are a number of interesting findings indicating that oxytocin alone isn't enough to produce happily bonded relationships. The effect oxytocin has depends on the overall quality of our existing relationships.
A 2010 study, for example, administered oxytocin or placebo to a group of men and asked each of them to describe their mother's parenting style. You might expect that men who received oxytocin would have warmer recollections about their moms, but that was only true with men who also described their current relationships as healthy and happy. Men who were more "anxiously attached" in their current relationships described their mothers as less caring on oxytocin than just placebo.
Another study showed that doses of oxytocin increase in-group favoritism and the exclusion of others. The researchers concluded that the close social bonds enhanced by oxytocin come at a cost to outsiders, who are viewed as even less trustworthy. Follow-up studies found similar associations between oxytocin and negative emotions like envy, distrust, favoritism and schadenfreude.
This reinforces the belief that oxytocin appears to function as an emotional enhancer, and not, as one of the study authors put it, "an all-purpose attachment panacea."
Now That's Cool
One of the hottest fields of research, Anawalt says, is oxytocin as an autism therapy. Studies have suggested that oxytocin improved social behavior in some children with autism.