From the Journals

‘Sighing’ tops mindfulness for reduced stress, improved mood


 

FROM CELL REPORTS MEDICINE

Cyclic sighing is more effective than mindfulness meditation for improving mood and reducing stress, new research suggests.

In a randomized controlled study, daily breathwork – especially cyclic breathing, which emphasizes shorter inhalations and prolonged exhalations – was associated with greater improvement in mood and a slower respiratory rate than mindfulness meditation.

Dr. David Spiegel

Dr. David Spiegel

“We were pleased that just 5 minutes a day of the breathing exercises positively affected mood and resulted in slower respiratory rate, indicating reduced arousal,” coinvestigator David Spiegel, MD, who directs the Center for Stress and Health at Stanford (Calif.) University, told this news organization.

The findings were published online in Cell Reports Medicine.

Intentional breath control

Controlled breathwork has emerged as a potential tool to manage stress and boost well-being.

In the new study, researchers compared three different daily 5-minute breathwork exercises to an equal amount of mindfulness meditation over 1 month in 108 healthy adults recruited mostly from an undergraduate psychology class at Stanford: 33 participants practiced cyclic hyperventilation, which emphasizes robust inhalation, short retention and rapid exhalation, 30 did exhale-focused cyclic sighing, 21 performed box breathing, which emphasizes equal duration of inhalation, breath retention, and exhalation, and 24 practiced mindfulness meditation (the control group).

The primary endpoints were improvement in mood and anxiety, as well as reduced physiologic arousal (respiratory rate, heart rate, and heart rate variability). Physiological data was collected using a wearable WHOOP strap.

All four groups showed significant daily improvement in mood, as well as reduction in anxiety and negative mood, but there were significant differences between mindfulness meditation and breathwork.

Using a mixed-effects model, the researchers showed that breathwork, especially the exhale-focused cyclic sighing, produced greater improvement in mood (P < .05) and reduction in respiratory rate (P < .05), compared with mindfulness meditation.

Specific patterns vs. passive attention

The finding supports the team’s hypothesis that intentional control over breath with specific breathing patterns produces more benefit to mood than passive attention to one’s breath, as in mindfulness meditation practice.

“It turned out that the cyclic sighing was indeed most soothing,” Dr. Spiegel noted.

“We expected that because of respiratory sinus arrhythmia. Exhaling is accomplished by increasing pressure in the chest, which increases venous return to the heart, triggering parasympathetic slowing of heart rate via the sinoatrial node,” he said.

Dr. Spiegel added that, conversely, inspiration reduces venous return, triggering sympathetic activity and increased heart rate.

“The magnitude of this heart rate variability is associated with better health, including recovery from myocardial infarction and even cancer survival. So self-soothing is a good thing, and we expected an advantage for cyclic sighing,” he said.

professor of neurobiology at Stanford (Calif.) University

Dr. Andrew Huberman

“If you’re looking to improve sleep and reduce daytime stress, recover from intense work, life, and/or training, then interventions that facilitate autonomic control (and indeed you can control it), brief (5 minutes) structured breathwork is among the more powerful (and zero cost) tools,” tweeted senior investigator Andrew Huberman, PhD, professor of neurobiology at Stanford.

Immediate application?

Sara Lazar, PhD, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, said the findings are “interesting” but cautioned that this is “just one study with a pretty small sample size,” and it only enrolled healthy college students.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Suicidality in an older patient with chronic kidney disease
MDedge Psychiatry
One in four cardiologists worldwide report mental health issues
MDedge Psychiatry
Medical student well-being during the COVID-19 pandemic
MDedge Psychiatry
Anxiety sensitivity fuels depression in dissociative identity disorder
MDedge Psychiatry
Subtle cognitive decline in a patient with depression and anxiety
MDedge Psychiatry
More on psilocybin
MDedge Psychiatry
Psychiatric illnesses share common brain network
MDedge Psychiatry
Primary care providers are increasingly addressing mental health concerns
MDedge Psychiatry
TMS tied to ‘marked’ antidepressant, anxiolytic effects in anxious depression
MDedge Psychiatry
Mental health system failing kids leaving ED
MDedge Psychiatry