Placebo Effects of Different Therapies not Identical
Not
all placebos are equal, and patients who respond to one placebo don't always
respond to others, according to research published July 31 in the open access
journal PLOS ONE by Jian Kong from Massachusetts General Hospital,
Harvard Medical School and colleagues from other institutions.
The researchers tested the analgesic effects of genuine
acupuncture, sham acupuncture and a placebo pill on healthy participants' pain
sensitivity. Participants were not told what treatment they were receiving, but
were informed that the pill was Tylenol, a well-known painkiller and different
schools of acupuncture: electroacupuncture and manual acupuncture (sham
acupuncture). A control group received no treatment at all. Shortly before and
after each treatment, a warm electrode was placed on participants' forearms and
the temperature gradually increased. They were asked to indicate when the heat
first became painful and when it became too hot to tolerate to identify pain
thresholds and tolerance.
No significant associations were found between participants'
responses to the different treatments, suggesting that none of these
individuals could be identified as placebo 'responders' or 'non-responders'.
However, participants' expectations that the treatment would help relieve pain
correlated with their pain thresholds and tolerance.
According to the authors, these and other parameters in
their study suggest that responses to a placebo depend on diverse factors
including the route of administration (pills or acupuncture), environmental
cues, and learning based on verbal suggestions or conditioning. Kong adds,
"It implies that placebo responses may not be dependent on stable
individual traits but rather are more a characteristic of the circumstances of
individuals or a combination of both trait and state."
In addition, they also found subjects' responses to sham
acupuncture correlated significantly with their response to genuine
acupuncture. This suggest that people who responded to genuine acupuncture were
significantly more likely to experience pain relief from sham acupuncture, but
the authors clarify that this does not indicate the two are the same. Instead,
they suggest that acupuncture may have non-specific pain-relieving effects that
may contribute to this observation.
Source:
Jian Kong, Rosa Spaeth, Amanda Cook, Irving Kirsch, Brian Claggett, Mark
Vangel, Randy L. Gollub, Jordan W. Smoller, Ted J. Kaptchuk. Are All
Placebo Effects Equal? Placebo Pills, Sham Acupuncture, Cue Conditioning and
Their Association. PLoS ONE, 2013; 8 (7): e67485 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0067485
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