Healthy Living

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Why is yawning contagious?

Marc Rosenthal

Marc Rosenthal

What a brain freeze really is, and other health mysteries explained.


Why is yawning contagious?
No one knows for sure, but a study published in a recent issue of the journal Cognitive Brain Research theorizes that yawning in response to someone else’s yawn may be an empathetic response, similar to laughter. “A yawn can be triggered not only by seeing a person yawn but also by hearing, reading about, or even just thinking about yawns,” says Steven Platek, Ph.D., a professor of psychology at Drexel University, in Philadelphia, who directed the research. Platek and his colleagues believe that contagious yawning may be a primitive way of modeling our feelings after other people’s.

What is brain freeze? 
It’s a pain in your head that occurs when the nerves on the roof of your mouth are hyperstimulated by cold foods, like ice cream and frozen drinks. The nerves are in your mouth, but the nerve center is in your brain, “so that’s where you feel the pain,” says Seymour Diamond, M.D., a headache specialist in Chicago and the executive chairperson of the National Headache Foundation. “This is known as referred pain.” Why do humans experience pain in one place when the stimulus is elsewhere? No one knows for sure. “We do know that migraine sufferers are more prone to ice cream headaches,” Diamond says. “We also know that eating slowly and sipping slowly seem to reduce the effects of the cold. Once the headache sets in, the fastest way to make it go away is to drink something lukewarm.” Practice your brain freeze avoidance tactics on these homemade ice cream recipes.

Why Do You Have Earwax?
To keep foreign matter from invading ear canals. Earwax, or cerumen, is produced by glands in the outer ear to protect the inner ear from infection. The sticky substance prevents dust, dirt, and bugs from getting in. “Just leave it alone,” says Andrew Cheng, M.D., an ear, nose, and throat specialist at the Manhattan Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital. Ears are self-cleaning: The wax slowly moves up and out of the ears on its own, dries up, and flakes off or washes away when you shampoo your hair. If you’re a Q-tip addict, clean just the outside of your ears. “Ear canals are like dead-end streets,” Cheng says. “Q-tips just push wax further in.” You could also accidentally scratch your ear canal or even puncture the eardrum. A hearing assessment is just one of the tests women often overlook.

Keep reading: Why is yawning contagious?

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Syndication:

From the Community…

Comments 1-10 of 107
  • ILoveFriday's Avatar
    Posted by ILoveFriday Wed Jul 8, 2009 1:30pm PDT

    Hahah ~ I yawned reading this article!!

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  • SC's Avatar
    Posted by SC Wed Jul 8, 2009 2:22pm PDT

    seeing an ear full of wax is so gross, clean it! don't it it build up and fall out! SICK.

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  • martza's Avatar
    Posted by martza Wed Jul 8, 2009 3:10pm PDT

    i hate ear wax ever since i heard that qtips r bad i stoped using them but is til use toilet paper to clean it i cant stand thinkin of my ear bein full of wax yuck!

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  • ABI's Avatar
    Posted by ABI Wed Jul 8, 2009 5:53pm PDT

    funny, I just yawned after reading the article.. coincidence?

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  • Blessing Chinyere U's Avatar
    Posted by Blessing Chinyere U Thu Jul 9, 2009 3:57am PDT

    hi, oh i just yawned now after reading this message. sure it is a disease. my grandfather told me, its caused by hunger or sickness. that sounds funny right

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  • Blessing Chinyere U's Avatar
    Posted by Blessing Chinyere U Thu Jul 9, 2009 3:57am PDT

    hi, oh i just yawned now after reading this message. sure it is a disease. my grandfather told me, its caused by hunger or sickness. that sounds funny right

    Report Abuse
  • lailoniali's Avatar
    Posted by lailoniali Thu Jul 9, 2009 4:57pm PDT

    hahaha....I also yawned while reading the article, and again just now while typing this comment, that's so funny.

    Report Abuse
  • Kathy's Avatar
    Posted by Kathy Fri Jul 10, 2009 6:04am PDT

    I learned that you can stop brain freezes by sticking your thumb against the roof of your mouth, to rewarm the nerves. It really works!

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  • StephanieL's Avatar
    Posted by StephanieL Fri Jul 10, 2009 11:23am PDT

    Actually, according to a medical journal I read a while back, the pain from a brain freeze is the sudden rush of blood in your head. When something really cold hits the roof of your mouth, your nerves send a message to the brain telling it it's about to get extremely cold really soon. The brain reacts to this by having a blood rush come through to help keep the brain warm from the anticipated cold.

    So by putting your thumb or something warm in your mouth soon after eating ice cream (or whatever), it hits your nerves and they stop sending that signal to the brain.

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  • Gizmo1's Avatar
    Posted by Gizmo1 Fri Jul 10, 2009 5:13pm PDT

    Snow cones are the worst!

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