Psychological Placebo and Nocebo Effects on Pain Rely on Expectation and Previous Experience - 01/02/16

Abstract |
Expectation and previous experience are both well established key mediators of placebo and nocebo effects. However, the investigation of their respective contribution to placebo and nocebo responses is rather difficult because most placebo and nocebo manipulations are contaminated by pre-existing treatment expectancies resulting from a learning history of previous medical interventions. To circumvent any resemblance to classical treatments, a purely psychological placebo-nocebo manipulation was established, namely, the “visual stripe pattern–induced modulation of pain.” To this end, experience and expectation regarding the effects of different visual cues (stripe patterns) on pain were varied across 3 different groups, with either only placebo instruction (expectation), placebo conditioning (experience), or both (expectation + experience) applied. Only the combined manipulation (expectation + experience) revealed significant behavioral and physiological placebo–nocebo effects on pain. Two subsequent experiments, which, in addition to placebo and nocebo cues, included a neutral control condition further showed that especially nocebo responses were more easily induced by this psychological placebo and nocebo manipulation. The results emphasize the great effect of psychological processes on placebo and nocebo effects. Particularly, nocebo effects should be addressed more thoroughly and carefully considered in clinical practice to prevent the accidental induction of side effects.
Perspective |
Even purely psychological interventions that lack any resemblance to classical pain treatments might alter subjective and physiological pain correlates. A manipulation of treatment expectation and actual treatment experience were mandatory to elicit this effect. Nocebo effects were especially induced, which indicated the necessity for prevention of accidental side effects besides exploitation of placebo responses.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Highlights |
• | The authors introduced a purely psychological, non-pharmacological placebo-nocebo paradigm. |
• | A combined manipulation of experience and expectation led to a significant modulation of pain. |
• | Even abstract treatments might alter the perception of pain. |
• | The authors' manipulation induced stronger nocebo than placebo responses. |
• | The results demonstrate the need for further research on the prevention of nocebo effects. |
Key words : Psychological placebo intervention, placebo hypoalgesia, nocebo hyperalgesia, experience, expectation
Plan
The study was supported by the German Research Foundation, grant FOR 605, Wi2714/3-2. |
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The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare. |
Vol 17 - N° 2
P. 203-214 - février 2016 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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