Being Annoyed By Noisy Chewing Is A Genuine Psychiatric Disorder

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There are few sounds in life which can make your blood pressure rise, but those certain few, by God are they annoying!

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You know the one’s, where you physically want to punch the person in the face – not that I condone any type of violence – for cracking their knuckles or grating their cutlery on the plate when you’re out at a meal.

If you’re like me, then perhaps the worst is those mates or family members who simply chew too loudly when you’re eating with them – smacking their chops together like it’s going out of fashion!

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Well it turns out you could be one of the many people suffering from a genuine brain abnormality called misophonia according to researchers at Newcastle University.

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Misophonia is a disorder where sufferers have a hatred of sounds such as eating, chewing, loud breathing or even repeated pen-clicking – and was first named as a condition back in 2001.

According to a report in the journal Current Biology, scientists have revealed that scans of misophonia sufferers, showed changes in brain activity when a ‘trigger’ sound was heard.

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The report also showed images of the brain where people with the condition have an abnormality in their emotional control mechanism – which causes their brains to go into overdrive on hearing the individual trigger sounds.

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The sounds were also responsible for increasing the heart rate and the amount some sufferers were sweating.

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Tim Griffiths, Professor of Cognitive Neurology at Newcastle University and UCL commented:

I was part of the sceptical community myself until we saw patients in the clinic and understood how strikingly similar the features are – I hope this will reassure sufferers.

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For the study, the team used an MRI to measure the brain activity of people with and without misophonia while they were listening to a range of sounds.

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The sounds were categorised into neutral sounds such as rain, a busy café, or water boiling, unpleasant sounds, defined as a baby crying or a person screaming and then trigger sounds, such as breathing or eating.

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When presented with trigger sounds, those with misophonia presented different results to those without the condition.

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Be warned – if you’re in a restaurant slurping your soup and a bread roll bounces of your head, it’s probably me – and I won’t apologise, I have a condition.

This story has been reposted and is not contemporary news.

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