Cortisol helps people overcome phobias
Researchers from the
University of Zurich are suggesting that a dose of the
stress hormone cortisol may help people overcome
phobias.
They have come up with a
pill which is based on cortisol. Cortisol impairs the
retrieval of memories, and people forget what they are
fearful of.
Working on this principle
the researchers were curious to see if people with a
phobia such as fear of spiders, when given a dose of the
hormone before exposure to a spider, or their own
personal phobia trigger, would be helped.
Arachnophobia a fear of
spiders affects as many as 7.5 million Britons, and
scores of others have an irrational fear of something,
heights, public speaking, getting in lifts etc. In many
the phobia can affect everyday living.
The Swiss researchers
tested the theory on 40 people with social phobia and 20
with spider phobia.
Half of the group were
given cortisol and the rest a placebo version and
depending on their phobia they were then asked to give a
speech in public, or were exposed to a spider.
The researchers found that
the subjects who received the hormone reported less
stimulus-induced fear and anxiety.
The tests also found that a
fortnight's course of cortisol was enough to reduce
people's fear of spiders by half and the scientists
believe further treatment, combined with counselling,
could completely banish the phobia.
The spider phobics were
made to look at a colour photograph of a large spider
and were then asked to gauge how scared they were, on a
scale of one to ten; the researchers watched for outward
signs of acute fear such as sweating or trembling.
This procedure was carried
out six times over the course of two weeks.
It was found that those
taking the cortisol were noticeably less fearful than
the others and by the fourth treatment their fear levels
had dropped by 45 per cent.
More importantly the
effects appeared to last, with the volunteers still
feeling brave two days after their last cortisol pill.
A second group with a fear
of public speaking, one of the most common phobias in
the UK, produced a similar result.
The men and women were
given cortisol before making a speech in front of an
audience and their heart rate remained much steadier and
their levels of fear dropped considerably.
Those patients who were not
given the hormone treatment who reported the least
anxiety released the most cortisol, which the
researchers say supports their theory.
The team, led by Dr.
Dominique de Quervain, suggest that cortisol treatment,
in conjunction with behavioural therapy, could be used
to reduce or even extinguish phobias and post-traumatic
stress disorders which are triggered by a particular
stimulus.
They believe that the
hormone, released naturally during stress, works by
making people forget what they are scared of; it is
thought that cortisol cuts blood flow to the part of the
brain that retrieves memories - leaving people unable to
remember their phobia.
The hormone also boosts the
formation of new memories which means that people
treated with it retain information about their new-found
bravery over images of their previous fear.
Experts have welcomed the
research but warn that it is still at a very early
stage.
Phobia expert Dr. Cosmo
Hallstrom, a fellow of the Royal College of
Psychiatrists, says cortisol is the hormone released
during stress and it is a powerful drug.
He says care must ensure
that the treatment is not as bad as the condition.
Hallstrom says the
treatment would not help people stop avoiding the thing
they had a phobia of.
Current phobia treatments
involve therapies such as cognitive behavioural
treatment, in which sufferers are made to confront their
phobia, and the use of anti- depressant drugs and
tranquillisers such as Valium to alleviate anxiety.
The National Phobics
Society, says all research into treatment possibilities
is welcome, but as phobias have a strong behavioural
component they view this particular treatment as
something that could be used to complement other
psychological interventions such as cognitive
behavioural therapy.