ELEVATION OF PLASMA BETA-ENDORPHIN LEVELS OF SHY ELDERLY IN RESPONSE TO NOVEL LABORATORY EXPERIENCES

Citation
Ir. Bell et al., ELEVATION OF PLASMA BETA-ENDORPHIN LEVELS OF SHY ELDERLY IN RESPONSE TO NOVEL LABORATORY EXPERIENCES, Behavioral medicine, 22(4), 1997, pp. 168-173
Citations number
27
Categorie Soggetti
Psychiatry,Psychiatry,"Behavioral Sciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
08964289
Volume
22
Issue
4
Year of publication
1997
Pages
168 - 173
Database
ISI
SICI code
0896-4289(1997)22:4<168:EOPBLO>2.0.ZU;2-3
Abstract
Heightened psychophysiological reactivity to the novel or unfamiliar i s a leading characteristic of shy or behaviorally inhibited individual s. To assess one aspect of the physiological stress response in shynes s, the authors compared the morning plasma beta-endorphin levels of 15 extremely shy, healthy elderly individuals with beta-endorphin levels of 15 extremely outgoing persons on three pairs of 2 successive days. The primary finding was that shy participants exhibited significantly higher levels of beta-endorphin on the 1st days of each pair of days, compared with the 2nd days in the laboratory. No main effect for shyn ess or interaction between shyness and diet on endorphin levels was fo und. The findings are consistent with a peripheral opioid hyperreactiv ity to novelty in shy elderly persons. Shyness may constitute a risk f actor for panic disorder in younger adults and for nasal allergies and certain cancers in older adults. Experimental design and interpretati on of future studies of shy individuals' stress responses may need to consider novelty versus familiarity of the procedures and setting.