PDA

View Full Version : The Reality of the Placebo Effect


Viki
07-30-2007, 05:14 PM
Researchers Demonstrate How Placebo Effect Works in the Brain


Columbia University scientists, with colleagues from the University of Michigan, have shown how the neurochemistry of the placebo effect can relieve pain in humans. The scientists found that the placebo effect caused the brains of test volunteers to release more of a natural painkiller.

The placebo effect is an improvement in a medical condition caused by a patient’s belief as opposed to actual treatment. Exactly how the positive expectations created by placebos translate into pain relief had been a mystery until now.

Understanding how placebo effects work may give scientists insight into why many drugs have a range of effects on people, how drugs and other treatments work together with psychological states, and how psychology can be effectively used in treatment.

The research team was led by Tor Wager, Columbia professor of psychology. “Placebo effects are often observed in clinical practice, but there have been relatively few scientific studies that document the kinds of diseases that can be influenced by placebo treatments and how the treatments work in the brain and body,” Wager said.

“Yet, placebo groups are included in virtually every major clinical trial, which is a testament to their importance. Only in the past few years have scientists developed the tools to directly investigate how placebos work in the human brain.”

In the experiment, scientists applied a placebo cream to volunteers’ forearms; volunteers were told it was a pain reliever, though the cream was not. Next, a control cream was applied to a nearby area, and subjects were told it had no effect. Researchers then placed a painfully hot stimulus (similar to a very hot cup of coffee) to both forearm areas and used positron emission tomography (PET) scans to measure and compare brain activity during each application. They found that the placebo treatment caused the brain to release more opioids, a chemical produced by the body and released by the brain, to relieve pain.

The scientists discovered that in the first area treated with a placebo, which volunteers falsely believed to have been treated with a pain reliever, opioid release occurred in brain areas associated with pain relief—in particular, the periadqeductal gray, an area in the brainstem used in neurosurgical interventions to control chronic pain. They also found opioid release in the orbitofrontal cortex and anterior cingulate, parts of the cerebral cortex thought to be related to evaluating and orchestrating responses in the brain and body to deal with a perceived threat—producing, for example, the so-called flight-or-fight response.

“These results extend our knowledge of how beliefs and expectations affect the brain's neurochemistry and show that one's mental response to a challenge can affect the brain and body in ways that are relevant to health,” Wager explained. “Understanding these interactions can pave the way for new treatments that are informed by knowledge of mind-body interactions.”

Source: Columbia University




This news is brought to you by PhysOrg.com

Viki
07-30-2007, 05:21 PM
I was talking with a friend who was asking yesterday about why it might be that she can't sleep when she takes Advil, a pain reliever that "shouldn't" have any direct effect on sleep.

Of course, I really have no idea, but always up for a theoretical challenge, I postulated that when she opts for an "unnatural" pain reliever, the stimulus-inducer (pain) might lessen to such an extinct that the natural sleep-inducing opiates that were released in response to the pain might lessen to such an extent that sleep was no longer as easy as it would have been had she relied on her body's natural opiates.

This article doesn't deal with that issue directly, but it does provide an example of the same sort of feedback loop.

cassandra
07-30-2007, 05:30 PM
So interesting.

issac the dragon
07-30-2007, 06:05 PM
That is hardly news. It was known in the 80's at least. Talked about. Apparently nothing done about. We used to tell patients in the hospital that they were getting placebos. Amazing how many people don't know what that is. The patients would ask us for the placebo instead of the percoset,etc, because the placebo worked. Gee, after 30 years, they've discovered the same thing all over again. I'm amazed.

bluedog
07-30-2007, 07:21 PM
Researchers Demonstrate How Placebo Effect Works in the Brain


Columbia University scientists, with colleagues from the University of Michigan, have shown how the neurochemistry of the placebo effect can relieve pain in humans. The scientists found that the placebo effect caused the brains of test volunteers to release more of a natural painkiller.

The placebo effect is an improvement in a medical condition caused by a patient’s belief as opposed to actual treatment. Exactly how the positive expectations created by placebos translate into pain relief had been a mystery until now.

Understanding how placebo effects work may give scientists insight into why many drugs have a range of effects on people, how drugs and other treatments work together with psychological states, and how psychology can be effectively used in treatment.

The research team was led by Tor Wager, Columbia professor of psychology. “Placebo effects are often observed in clinical practice, but there have been relatively few scientific studies that document the kinds of diseases that can be influenced by placebo treatments and how the treatments work in the brain and body,” Wager said.

“Yet, placebo groups are included in virtually every major clinical trial, which is a testament to their importance. Only in the past few years have scientists developed the tools to directly investigate how placebos work in the human brain.”

In the experiment, scientists applied a placebo cream to volunteers’ forearms; volunteers were told it was a pain reliever, though the cream was not. Next, a control cream was applied to a nearby area, and subjects were told it had no effect. Researchers then placed a painfully hot stimulus (similar to a very hot cup of coffee) to both forearm areas and used positron emission tomography (PET) scans to measure and compare brain activity during each application. They found that the placebo treatment caused the brain to release more opioids, a chemical produced by the body and released by the brain, to relieve pain.

The scientists discovered that in the first area treated with a placebo, which volunteers falsely believed to have been treated with a pain reliever, opioid release occurred in brain areas associated with pain relief—in particular, the periadqeductal gray, an area in the brainstem used in neurosurgical interventions to control chronic pain. They also found opioid release in the orbitofrontal cortex and anterior cingulate, parts of the cerebral cortex thought to be related to evaluating and orchestrating responses in the brain and body to deal with a perceived threat—producing, for example, the so-called flight-or-fight response.

“These results extend our knowledge of how beliefs and expectations affect the brain's neurochemistry and show that one's mental response to a challenge can affect the brain and body in ways that are relevant to health,” Wager explained. “Understanding these interactions can pave the way for new treatments that are informed by knowledge of mind-body interactions.”

Source: Columbia University




This news is brought to you by PhysOrg.com

It's nice to see "science" finally catching up with "faith". However much money was spent to find these simple "facts" of how ones mind can control their body, was perhaps wasted, as this fact has been known for centuries by people of faith. And now with scientific research by some they have found the following, that many of us "knew" all along.

People who pray live LONGER, HEALTHIER LIVES (Duke Univ. Journal of Geronontology/the study of aging)

Regular prayer and Bible study are known to reduce stress and tension in everyday life (www.uastoday.com)

People who attend church regularly are both physically healthier and less depressed than those who do not (www.secualr.com)

People who pray at least once a day recover more quickly from common illnesses, and have a lower rate of cancer and heart disease than those who do not (International Journal of Psychiatric Medicine Oct. 97)

So I also conclude that the "mind" is a powerful force in relation to both the "spiritual" and "physical" well being of anyone. BD