Vitality Unleashed: The Functional Medicine Podcast

How Laughter Lowers Cortisol, Lifts Hope, And Protects Long-Term Health

Dr. Kumar from LifeWellMD.com Season 1 Episode 184

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A growing stack of clinical evidence says the body doesn’t just enjoy a good laugh—it transforms because of it. We break down how spontaneous laughs and laughter yoga can lower cortisol by double digits within minutes, restore homeostasis, and create durable gains in happiness, hope, and resilience. If you’ve ever wondered whether a light-hearted practice could meaningfully change stress, sleep, and pain, the data is here and it’s compelling.

We trace the mechanisms behind laughter’s impact: diaphragmatic movement, oxygenation, and endorphin release that cue the nervous system to stand down. You’ll hear about a meta-analysis showing a roughly 32% cortisol reduction with natural laughter and immediate drops after single sessions. We explore accessible techniques—silent laughter, rhythmic clapping, and playful breath-led drills—that work even on days when nothing feels funny. Then we zoom out to broader outcomes: reduced anxiety and stress among more than 1,300 nursing students, better sleep quality, and documented pain relief in challenging clinical settings like hemodialysis, along with improved quality of life and cognitive support in cancer care.

Longevity seekers will appreciate the bigger picture. Regular laughter practice is non-invasive, low-cost, and now proven effective over video platforms, making it easy to build into daily routines and group programs. We also spotlight sobering findings linking low laughter frequency with higher risk of functional disability in older adults, reframing laughter as a protective factor for independence. You’ll leave with a clear, repeatable routine you can start today—five to ten minutes that compound into meaningful changes across mind and body.

If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs a lift, and leave a review with the one laughter habit you’ll try this week. Your feedback helps more people discover science-backed tools for stress relief and healthy aging.

Disclaimer:
The information provided in this podcast is for educational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. Always consult with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to your supplement regimen or health routine. Individual needs and reactions vary, so it’s important to make informed decisions with the guidance of your physician.

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If you enjoyed today’s episode, be sure to subscribe, leave us a review, and share it with someone who might benefit. For more insights and updates, visit our website at Lifewellmd.com.

Stay Informed, Stay Healthy: 
Remember, informed choices lead to better health. Until next time, be well and take care of yourself.

SPEAKER_00

Welcome to the deep dive. Today, our mission is, well, turning some pretty complex research into knowledge you can actually use for your long-term wellness.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

You probably heard that old saying, laughter is the best medicine.

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Sure, everyone has.

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Most people probably just think, oh, that's a nice thought.

From Folklore To Hard Science

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But today, we're diving in to show it's a measurable physiological reality.

SPEAKER_01

It really is. This isn't just folklore we're talking about. It's a proper look at the hard science behind it all.

SPEAKER_00

So what have we got?

SPEAKER_01

Well, we've synthesized a stack of recent clinical research. We're talking systematic reviews, meta-analyses, mostly stuff published since 2020.

SPEAKER_00

Okay.

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And they demonstrate how laughter therapy can be a really powerful non-invasive tool for longevity, for health. It lines up perfectly with the kind of holistic methods championed by, you know, Dr. Kumar and the team at LifeWellMD.com.

SPEAKER_00

Right. So let's get straight into it. The foundation of

Cortisol And Chronic Stress Risks

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wellness reducing stress. We absolutely have to talk about cortisol.

SPEAKER_01

Ah, cortisol, yes, the body's main stress hormone.

SPEAKER_00

Everyone knows the name, but actively managing it, that's another story. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

It really is. See, cortisol is essentially the body's alarm system. But when it's chronically high, which let's be honest, is the case for a lot of people these days.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, it feels like it.

SPEAKER_01

It's strongly linked to a whole range of physical and psychological diseases, things like metabolic issues, obesity, even depression, chronic pain.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell So if you're serious about longevity, getting cortisol under control is, well, it's paramount.

SPEAKER_01

Trevor Burrus, Jr.: Absolutely essential.

SPEAKER_00

Trevor Burrus, And this is where the data we looked at gets well almost unbelievable. There was this systematic review and meta-analysis, eight studies, about 315 participants, and it quantified the effect of genuine spontaneous laughter. You know, the kind you get from a really funny video or a great joke with friends.

SPEAKER_01

Right. The real deal. And the key finding there, it was pretty stunning.

SPEAKER_00

Tell us.

SPEAKER_01

Spontaneous laughter is consistently associated with a significant reduction in circulating cortisol levels. We're talking roughly 32% lower compared to just usual rest or activity.

SPEAKER_00

Wait, 32%?

SPEAKER_01

32%. That number. It really should make you pause. When we talk about managing inflammation, managing disease markers, a 32% drop from something as simple as laughing, that's huge.

SPEAKER_00

I mean, that's yeah, that's almost hard to wrap your head around. A 32% drop just by laughing.

SPEAKER_01

Hmm.

SPEAKER_00

It definitely changes how I think about, say, taking a quick break during the day.

SPEAKER_01

It should. And what's really remarkable is the speed. Sensitivity analyses in that review showed something else

The 32 Percent Cortisol Drop

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quite interesting.

SPEAKER_00

What's that?

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That even a single laughter session, and these could range from just nine minutes up to an hour, even one session induced an immediate, significant reduction. About 36.7% in cortisol.

SPEAKER_00

Wow. So almost instant stress relief then.

SPEAKER_01

The relief truly is almost instantaneous, it seems. But let's maybe clarify the clinical significance for you listening. You mentioned restoring biological homeostasis. That sounds technical. It does, yeah. For someone maybe not familiar with that term, what does achieving that balance through laughter actually mean for their day-to-day health?

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell That's a really good question. We hear balance all the time, but what are the tangible results?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Well, homeostasis is simply the body getting back to its natural, healthy equilibrium. See, cortisol is designed for survival, right? Fight or flight. Which means it shuts down stuff it thinks isn't essential right now. So chronic stress. It can inhibit everything from proper digestion to reproductive health.

SPEAKER_00

Okay. That makes sense.

SPEAKER_01

And a surprising example the research highlighted it's the connection between reduced cortisol levels and processes like well, like hair growth.

SPEAKER_00

Hair growth. Really?

SPEAKER_01

High chronic stress can basically push hair follicles into a resting phase. So by using laughter to manage that stress, you're essentially restoring the biological signal that says, hey, we're safe now.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell And the body can get back to its normal business.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Exactly. It allows your body to resume those essential restorative processes.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell That's a perfect illustration. So laughter is literally helping restore the functional health of your body right from the cellular level up.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Precisely. We're talking about optimizing core bodily functions here. Aaron Powell Okay.

SPEAKER_00

So if spontaneous laughter gives this profound physiological relief, that brings up a really interesting question for anyone planning their wellness routine. How do we harness that power intentionally? Especially on those days when, let's face it, finding something funny feels like a chore.

SPEAKER_01

Ah, right. And that's where the formal practice of laughter

Homeostasis And Everyday Health

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yoga comes in.

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Laughter yoga. Tell us about that.

SPEAKER_01

So laughter yoga, it was pioneered by Dr. Madan Kataria. It's a core intervention that combines unconditional, simulated laughter.

SPEAKER_00

Simulated.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, simulated. With deep yogic breathing, pranayama, and gentle stretching. And here's the crucial insight. The body seems to benefit from the act of laughing itself, whether or not you actually found something funny. You don't need humor to start.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, that's the part that feels a bit counterintuitive, doesn't it? Like if I'm just pretending to laugh, how does my body get the same benefit? Is it really fooled?

SPEAKER_01

It's fascinating, isn't it? But the physiological response, you know, the release of endorphins, the increased oxygen from the deep breathing, the muscle engagement, it's virtually identical whether the laughter is spontaneous or simulated. Your brain essentially registers the physical feedback, the movements, the sound, and signals the stress response to, well, stand down. It's like an effective workaround for getting that physical relief quickly.

unknown

Huh.

SPEAKER_00

That makes laughter yoga an incredibly powerful tool then, especially for psychological longevity. Definitely. We looked at one interventional study focusing on elderly retirees, 220 of them. They did regular laughter yoga sessions, like eight 45-minute sessions over four weeks.

SPEAKER_01

Right. I remember that one. They measured happiness and also something they called life expectancy, but it was really more about a sense of hope for the future.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell Exactly, hope. And what did they find?

SPEAKER_01

The results were pretty definitive on both fronts. The group doing laughter yoga, they saw a significant jump in their happiness scores. Their average went from the low 60s up to nearly 70.

SPEAKER_00

That's quite an increase.

SPEAKER_01

It is. But maybe even more profoundly. The laughter yoga significantly improved their measured hope, their sense of future possibility. That improved way more than in the control group. And that sense of hope, that's really the bedrock of wellness, isn't it? Having the psychological resilience to look forward.

SPEAKER_00

Absolutely. And the simplicity scene's

Laughter Yoga Mechanics

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key here. If you're listening and thinking, okay, how do I actually do laughter yoga? The techniques themselves, they seem really accessible.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, they are. They're designed to be playful, deliberately non-serious. You might do something called milkshake laughter where you pretend to mix a drink and then laugh, or silent laughter, open your mouth wide, let the belly jiggle, but no sound. Okay. Another common one is laughter and greeting. Often involves clapping, maybe chanting rhythmic syllables like ho ho, ha ha ha. It really strips away that need for intellectual humor and just focuses on the physical act, the mechanism.

SPEAKER_00

It sounds like a fantastic low-barrier kind of intervention, something that could easily be integrated into, well, comprehensive programs like those emphasizing non-invasive wellness, which is, you know, a hallmark of the life willing D approach.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Exactly right. It needs virtually no equipment, just a willingness to try. That makes it perfect for sustained health improvement over time.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell So moving beyond those psychological benefits, hope, happiness, the research also shows these interventions have measurable impacts across a wider spectrum of health challenges, right? Physical and mental.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Yes. Let's look at populations under, say, extreme stress. There was a large meta-analysis focusing on high stress groups, specifically nursing students, over 1,300 of them across 18 different studies.

SPEAKER_00

Wow, that's a lot of data.

SPEAKER_01

It is. And the conclusion was pretty undeniable. Laughter-based interventions significantly reduce their measures of anxiety and general stress.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell And it wasn't just a mental shift, was it? These interventions also seem to improve other things.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell That's right. They improve sleep quality, increase general well-being, and boosted overall happiness metrics across these different groups of students. Real measurable improvement.

SPEAKER_00

Okay. What about physical discomfort, like pain?

Hope And Happiness Gains

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. We also have evidence showing therapeutic value there in managing chronic discomfort. Some studies indicate that laughter therapy can actually reduce the subjective perception of pain right after a session.

SPEAKER_00

Immediately after.

SPEAKER_01

Immediately following, yes. This effect has been documented in some really challenging environments, too. For example, in patients undergoing physically draining treatments like hemodialysis.

SPEAKER_00

That's significant.

SPEAKER_01

It is. And it's also being used to help bolster quality of life and even improve cognitive function in cancer patients.

SPEAKER_00

So when we talk about finding optimal solutions for longevity, a critical factor is always accessibility, isn't it?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Always.

SPEAKER_00

And laughter therapy seems to tick that box. It's recognized pretty much universally as non-invasive, cost-effective, and easy to implement.

SPEAKER_01

Absolutely. It's medicine with basically zero adverse side effects, which is pretty rare.

SPEAKER_00

It really is.

SPEAKER_01

And its reach has grown hugely, especially recently. There is a successful randomized controlled study showing that laughter therapy stayed completely effective, even when delivered online, you know, via video platforms like Zoom.

SPEAKER_00

It's huge for accessibility.

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It's a game changer. It means geography isn't a barrier anymore. People can access these proven mental and physical health benefits, ensuring continuity of care, which is so important.

SPEAKER_00

Okay. So this accumulation of evidence is pretty powerful. For you, the listener, as you're thinking about your own wellness journey, this means you have a potent tool available, like right now. Let's just summarize what the science is telling you, telling all of us, really.

SPEAKER_01

Okay. The core findings are crystal clear. Laughter, whether it's spontaneous from a joke or simulated through exercises, it positively impacts physiological stress. It drops those cortisol levels. Right. It boosts psychological resilience, increasing happiness, increasing hope. And it provides measurable therapeutic relief for things like anxiety, stress, and even pain tolerance.

SPEAKER_00

So the actionable takeaway seems pretty straightforward then. I think so. Commit to consciously introducing sources of joyful laughter, or maybe these simulated laughter exercises, into your daily routine. It's preventative medicine that's literally free.

SPEAKER_01

And remember, the benefits seem to come from the physical act. So make sure you're actually engaging those muscles, moving your diaphragm, vocalizing that laugh every single day, even if it feels silly at first.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, get over the silliness factor.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. And this integration of powerful non-pharmacological methods

Stress, Anxiety, And Sleep Evidence

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that's really at the core of the approach at lifewellmd.com. We believe in empowering you with science-backed tools like therapeutic laughter to help restore that biological balance and really enhance your quality of life.

SPEAKER_00

It feels like this ancient wisdom has stood the test of time, but now it's got the official backing of objective clinical data. Laughter really is powerful medicine.

SPEAKER_01

It truly is. Low risk, high reward. A great tool for maintaining physical and mental health, and ultimately for achieving exceptional longevity.

SPEAKER_00

And it's not just about feeling good temporarily, is it? There was something else in the research about long-term function.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, that was quite sobering, actually. One study pointed out that a low frequency of laughter was linked to a higher risk of developing functional disability in older adult, the loss of ability to perform daily tasks independently. So if you think about it that way, laughter isn't just a mental boost, it could actually be a protective factor against physical decline as we age.

SPEAKER_00

Wow. Okay, that definitely raises an important question for you listening to Mullover. If laughter can potentially help maintain independence and prevent physical decline, what small intentional shift could you make in your daily routine? Maybe it's finding a funny podcast, maybe it's a five-minute laughter yoga session, what shift could add years of joy and healthy function to your life?

SPEAKER_01

It's a powerful thought. And you don't need to wait to start integrating this tool to explore how a tailored wellness plan, one that integrates scientifically proven tools like therapeutic laughter, can improve your quality of life and longevity. Well, we really encourage you to connect with Dr. Kumar and the experts at lifewellmd.com today. To start your wellness journey today, you can call 561 210 9999.

Pain Relief And Clinical Settings

SPEAKER_01

That's 561 210 9999 to connect with Dr. Kumar and the experts at lifewellmd.com. Don't hesitate to reach out.