Abstract

Background: Elixirs conferring eternal youth or inducing amatory and erotic attraction have been searched for without success. Lovesickness is a widespread affliction resulting from unrequited love and/or the impossibility for physical and emotional union. The symptoms are reflections of altered dopamine, serotonin, noradrenaline, testosterone and cortisol levels and range from frenzy and intrusive thinking to despair and depression, sharing traits with the neurochemistry of addiction and compulsive behavior disorder. Although it can seriously impact the quality of life, lovesickness is currently not considered in official disease classification systems. Consequently, no official therapeutic guidelines exist, leaving subjects to seek the cure on their own.Methods: We review literature of the past 2000 years dealing with the concept, diagnosis and the healing of lovesickness and contextualize it with neurochemical, ethnomedical, and ethnographic data. Since neurobiological and pharmacological connections between the love drive and the sex drive exist, we review also the literature about herbal an- and aphrodisiacs, focusing on their excitatory or calmative potential.Results: An overall consensus regarding socio-behavioral regimes exists for dealing with lovesickness from historical through contemporary literature. The herbal drugs used for treating lovesickness or inducing love passion do not possess the alleged properties. The pharmacological effects of aphrodisiacs are heterogeneous, including dopaminergic and adrenergic activities, but there is no evidence for any serotonergic effects. The libido-regulating properties of anaphrodisiacs seem to be associated with sedative and toxic effects or decreasing testosterone levels. CB2 receptors expressed on dopaminergic neurons of the ventral tegmental area, part of the brain’s reward circuit, implicated with addiction, orgasm and strong emotions such as love, might constitute a new therapeutic target.Conclusion: The common food additive and CB2 agonist β-caryophyllene might have the potential to attenuate dopaminergic firing, quenching the reward and thus motivation associated with romantic love. From Greek mythology to modern history, cultural expressions and implications of love, sex and procreation is and was organized along hierarchical lines that put men on top. The neuronal predispositions and activities associated with falling in love will probably forever remain nature’s and Eros’ secret.

Highlights

  • Being struck by Eros’ golden arrow penetrating one’s heart symbolizes the overwhelming emotions we are inescapably exposed to when falling in love

  • The perceived intentionality and causality synthesized through the symbolism of the love arrow (Págan Cánovas, 2011) and experienced through the intoxicating and aching effect of erotic infatuation has led to the belief that mutual feeling of passionate love can be triggered with love potions, herbal drugs, charms and sorcery (e.g., Lewin, 1920; Taberner, 1985; Cabot and Cowan, 1992; Faraone, 1999; Saar, 2017)

  • As human biology is reflected in cultural expression, the experience of romantic love and unrequited erotic attraction can be traced through philosophy, mythology, medicine, literature and art in general

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Being struck by Eros’ golden arrow penetrating one’s heart symbolizes the overwhelming emotions we are inescapably exposed to when falling in love. This theory coincides with the notion that the eyes are generally seen as the windows to the soul (Ibn Hazm, 1994; Lick et al, 2016) and the fact that they reflect our emotions via the innervation of the sympathetic system through the interaction of noradrenaline with α1-receptors (McCorry, 2007). Strong feelings such as pleasure and fear, as well as pleasurable visual stimuli are processed by the sympathetic-adrenal system and are generally reflected by pupillary dilatation (Hess and Polt, 1960). No official therapeutic guidelines exist, leaving subjects to seek the cure on their own

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call