#fight-or-flight response

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Fight-or-flight response is altered in healthy young people who had COVID-19

New research published in The Journal of Physiology found that otherwise healthy young people diagnosed with COVID-19, regardless of their symptom severity, have problems with their nervous system when compared with healthy control subjects.

Specifically, the system which oversees the fight-or-flight response, the sympathetic nervous system, seems to be abnormal (overactive in some instances and underactive in others) in those recently diagnosed with COVID-19.

These results are especially important given the emerging evidence of symptoms like racing hearts being reported in conjunction with “long-COVID.”

The impact of this alteration in fight-or-flight response, especially if prolonged, means that many processes within the body could be disrupted or affected. This research team has specifically been looking at the impact on the cardiovascular system – including blood pressure and blood flow – but the sympathetic nervous system is also important in exercise responses, the digestive system, the immune function, and more.

Understanding what happens in the body shortly following diagnosis of COVID-19 is an important first step towards understanding the potential long-term consequences of contracting the disease.

Importantly, if similar disruption of the flight-or-fight response, like that found here in young individuals, is present in older adults following COVID-19 infection, there may be substantial adverse implications for cardiovascular health.

The researchers studied lung function, exercise capacity, vascular function, and neural cardiovascular control (the control of heartbeat by the brain).

They used a technique called microneurography, wherein the researchers inserted a tiny needle with an electrode into a nerve behind the knee, which records the electrical impulses of that nerve and measures how many bursts of electrical activity are happening and how big the bursts are.

From this nerve activity, they can assess the function of the sympathetic nervous system through a series of tests. For all the tests, the subject was lying on their back on a bed. First, the researchers looked at the baseline resting activity of the nerves, heart rate, and blood pressure. Resting sympathetic nerve activity was higher in the COVID-19 participants than healthy people used as controls in the experiment.

Then, the subject did a “cold pressor test,” where they stick their hand in an ice-water mixture (~0° C) for two minutes. In healthy individuals, this causes a profound increase in that sympathetic nerve (fight-or-flight) activity and blood pressure. The COVID-19 subjects rated their pain substantially lower than healthy subjects typically do.

Finally, the participant was moved to an upright position (the bed they’re lying on can tilt up and down) to see how well their body can respond to a change in position. The COVID-19 subjects had a pretty large increase in heart rate during this test; they also had higher sympathetic nerve activity throughout the tilt test compared with other healthy young adults.

As with all research on humans, there are limitations to this study. However, the biggest limitation in the present study is its cross-sectional nature – in other words, we do not know what the COVID-19 subjects’ nervous system activity “looked like” before they were diagnosed with COVID-19.

These findings are consistent with the increasing reports of long-COVID symptoms pertaining to problems with the fight-or-flight response.

Abigail Stickford, senior author on this study said, “Through our collaborative project, we have been following this cohort of COVID-19 subjects for 6 months following their positive test results. This work was representative of short-term data, so the next steps for us are to wrap up data collection and interpret how the subjects have changed over this time.”

Trust is a topic that comes up time and again. It’s beyond just a cornerstone of a relationshi

Trust is a topic that comes up time and again. It’s beyond just a cornerstone of a relationship between a Dominant and a submissive, it’s the entire foundation. Without it everything comes tumbling down, nothing but ruins in seconds. 

Choking, beyond anything else, involves a phenomenal amount of trust on both sides. Wanting to be choked isn’t just enjoying the lack of air, it’s to intermingle the feeling of desperate, exhilarating fear, that pumps your brain full of endorphins and kicks in that fight or flight response, with sex. But it’s so very dangerous, and so the submissive must have complete trust in the Dominant’s hands, their judgement, their intentions, and their love. 

But that’s not where it ends. The Dominant needs trust too. He has to trust himself, above anything else, to be able to make that call. To be able to know when to let up, when to keep pushing. It’s why so many wholesale refuse to involve sex in a scene, as they fear it will impair their judgement to the degree where they’re no longer acting in a safe manner. In many ways, there’s more danger on the side of the Dominant, because the responsibility lies with them, whether that’s just their perspective or not. If something goes wrong, they’ll blame themselves forever. 

Which is to say, wrapping a thing cord around a girl’s neck isn’t what you should be considering, even if she is. There’s dangerous, and there’s dangerous. This is the latter.

So yeah, trust is pretty important. Apologies for the sombre tone.


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