In the
medieval Islamic world the Persian psychologist-
physicians Ahmed ibn Sahl al-Balkhi (d. 934) and
Haly Abbas (d. 994) developed an early model of illness that emphasized the interaction of the mind and the body. He proposed that a patient's
physiology and
psychology can influence one another. Contrary to
Hippocrates and
Galen,
Ahmed ibn Sahl al-Balkhi did not believe that mere regulation and modulation of the body tempers and medication would remedy mental disorders because words play a vital and necessary role in
emotional regulation. To change such behaviors, he used techniques, such as belief altering, regular musing, rehearsals of experiences, and imagination. In the beginnings of the 20th century, there was a renewed interest in psychosomatic concepts. Psychoanalyst
Franz Alexander had a deep interest in understanding the dynamic interrelation between mind and body.
Sigmund Freud pursued a deep interest in psychosomatic illnesses following his correspondence with
Georg Groddeck who was, at the time, researching the possibility of treating physical disorders through psychological processes.
Hélène Michel-Wolfromm applied psychosomatic medicine to the field of gynecology and sexual problems experienced by women. In the 1970s,
Thure von Uexküll and his colleagues in
Germany and elsewhere proposed a
biosemiotic theory (the
umwelt concept) that was widely influential as a theoretical framework for conceptualizing mind-body relations. This model shows that life is a meaning or functional system. Farzad Goli further explains in
Biosemiotic Medicine (2016), how signs in the form of matter (e.g., atoms, molecules, cells), energy (e.g., electrical signals in nervous system), symbols (e.g., words, images, machine codes), and reflections (e.g., mindful moments, metacognition) can be interpreted and translated into each other.
Henri Laborit, one of the founders of modern neuropsychopharmacology, carried out experiments in the 1970s that showed that illness quickly occurred when there was inhibition of action in rats. Rats in exactly the same stressful situations but whom were not inhibited in their behavior (those who could flee or fight—even if fighting is completely ineffective) had no negative health consequences. He proposed that psychosomatic illnesses in humans largely have their source in the constraints that society puts on individuals in order to maintain hierarchical structures of dominance. The film
My American Uncle, directed by
Alain Resnais and influenced by Laborit, explores the relationship between self and society and the effects of the inhibition of action. In February 2005, the Boston Syndromic Surveillance System detected an increase in young men seeking medical treatment for
stroke. Most of them did not actually experience a stroke, but the largest number presented a day after
Tedy Bruschi, a local sports figure, was hospitalized for a stroke. Presumably they began misinterpreting their own harmless symptoms, a group phenomenon now known as Tedy Bruschi syndrome. Robert Adler is credited with coining the term Psychoneuroimmunology (PNI) to categorize a new field of study also known as mind-body medicine. The principles of mind-body medicine suggest that our mind and the emotional thoughts we produce have an incredible impact on our physiology, either positive or negative. PNI integrates the mental/psychological, nervous, and immune system, and these systems are further linked together by ligands, which are hormones, neurotransmitters and peptides. PNI studies how every single cell in our body is in constant communication—how they are literally having a conversation and are responsible for 98% of all data transferred between the body and the brain. Dr. Candace Pert, a professor and neuroscientist who discovered the opiate receptor, called this communication between our cells the ‘Molecules of Emotion' because they produce the feelings of bliss, hunger, anger, relaxation, or satiety. Dr. Pert maintains that our body is our subconscious mind, so what is going on in the subconscious mind is being played out by our body. == See also ==