The rubber hand illusion increases histamine reactivity in the real arm

Abstract

SummaryMost people are convinced that their body parts are in fact their own, but in some clinical conditions, this sense of ownership can be lost [1]. Perceptual illusions, most famously the rubber hand illusion (RHI) [2], demonstrate that a sense of ownership over a body part (or an entire body [3]) that is not in fact ours can be easily induced in healthy volunteers. But does illusory ownership over an artificial body part have consequences for the real body part, the one that has been ‘replaced'? Recent data show the RHI induces a small but robust drop in skin temperature of the real hand. That is, blood flow to the ‘disowned’ hand seems to be selectively reduced [1]. Such a finding is particularly relevant to the immune system because a primary role of the immune system is to ‘discriminate self from non-self’ [4]. We predicted that the innate immune system may be upregulated in a manner consistent with rejection of the replaced hand. Consistent with this prediction, we report here that the RHI increases histamine reactivity, which is a key final pathway of the innate immune response and has been implicated in autoimmune disorders, including multiple sclerosis [5]. Our finding has direct implications for autoimmune disorders and a range of neurological and psychiatric conditions characterised by a disrupted sense of ownership over one's body (see [1] for a list of conditions), and has broader implications that extend well beyond previous assertions about the mind-body link

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This paper was published in Elsevier - Publisher Connector .

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