scholarly journals Prior Therapeutic Experiences, Not Expectation Ratings, Predict Placebo Effects: An Experimental Study in Chronic Pain and Healthy Participants

2020 ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
Luana Colloca ◽  
Titilola Akintola ◽  
Nathaniel R. Haycock ◽  
Maxie Blasini ◽  
Sharon Thomas ◽  
...  
Sensors ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (11) ◽  
pp. 3721 ◽  
Author(s):  
Usman Rashid ◽  
Imran Niazi ◽  
Nada Signal ◽  
Denise Taylor

Texas Instruments ADS1299 is an attractive choice for low cost electroencephalography (EEG) devices owing to its low power consumption and low input referred noise. To date, there have been no rigorous evaluations of its performance. In this EEG experimental study we evaluated the performance of the ADS1299 against a high quality laboratory-based system. Two self-paced lower limb motor tasks were performed by 22 healthy participants. Recorded power across delta, theta, alpha, and beta EEG bands, the power ratio across the motor tasks, pre-movement noise, and signal-to-noise ratio were obtained for evaluation. The amplitude and time of the negative peak in the movement-related cortical potentials (MRCPs) extracted from the EEG data were also obtained. Using linear mixed models, no statistically significant differences (p > 0.05) were found in any of these measures across the two systems. These findings were further supported by evaluation of cosine similarity, waveform differences, and topographic maps. There were statistically significant differences in MRCPs across the motor tasks in both systems. We conclude that the performance of the ADS1299 in combination with wet Ag/AgCl electrodes is analogous to that of a laboratory-based system in a low frequency (<40 Hz) EEG recording.


BMJ ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. m1668 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ted J Kaptchuk ◽  
Christopher C Hemond ◽  
Franklin G Miller

ABSTRACTDespite their ubiquitous presence, placebos and placebo effects retain an ambiguous and unsettling presence in biomedicine. Specifically focused on chronic pain, this review examines the effect of placebo treatment under three distinct frameworks: double blind, deception, and open label honestly prescribed. These specific conditions do not necessarily differentially modify placebo outcomes. Psychological, clinical, and neurological theories of placebo effects are scrutinized. In chronic pain, conscious expectation does not reliably predict placebo effects. A supportive patient-physician relationship may enhance placebo effects. This review highlights “predictive coding” and “bayesian brain” as emerging models derived from computational neurobiology that offer a unified framework to explain the heterogeneous evidence on placebos. These models invert the dogma of the brain as a stimulus driven organ to one in which perception relies heavily on learnt, top down, cortical predictions to infer the source of incoming sensory data. In predictive coding/bayesian brain, both chronic pain (significantly modulated by central sensitization) and its alleviation with placebo treatment are explicated as centrally encoded, mostly non-conscious, bayesian biases. The review then evaluates seven ways in which placebos are used in clinical practice and research and their bioethical implications. In this way, it shows that placebo effects are evidence based, clinically relevant, and potentially ethical tools for relieving chronic pain.


2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 99-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristian K. Petersen ◽  
Megan E. McPhee ◽  
Morten S. Hoegh ◽  
Thomas Graven-Nielsen

Pain ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 161 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-23 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ina Skyt ◽  
Sigrid J. Lunde ◽  
Cathrine Baastrup ◽  
Peter Svensson ◽  
Troels S. Jensen ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marte Roel Lesur ◽  
Elena Bolt ◽  
Bigna Lenggenhager

AbstractDuring autoscopic phenomena, people perceive a double of themselves in extrapersonal space. Such clinical allocentric self-experiences often co-occur with auditory hallucinations, yet experimental setups to induce similar illusions in healthy participants have been limited to visual doubles. We investigated whether feeling the presence of an auditory double could be provoked in healthy participants and how it might affect spatial aspects of bodily self-consciousness. We recorded the own versus another person’s voice while walking around in the room using binaural headphones from an egocentric and an allocentric perspective. In comparison to listening to their own moving voice egocentrically, when listening to themselves allocentrically, participants reported a strong feeling of a presence with a similarly high degree of self-identification, suggesting a successful induction of the feeling of an acoustic doppelganger. When pointing to the source of the own voice participants localized it closer to themselves than when listening to another person’s voice, suggesting a change in spatial perception. Interestingly, the opposite pattern was found in participants that had previous hallucinatory experiences. These findings show that listening to one’s own voice allocentrically can manipulate bodily self-consciousness and self-related spatial perception. This paradigm enables the experimental study of the relationship between auditory vocal hallucinations and bodily self-consciousness, bridging important clinical phenomena and experimental knowledge.


2019 ◽  
Vol 76 (2) ◽  
pp. 654-663
Author(s):  
Alberto José Gómez‐González ◽  
Juan Carlos Morilla‐Herrera ◽  
Inmaculada Lupiáñez‐Pérez ◽  
José Miguel Morales‐Asencio ◽  
Silvia García‐Mayor ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 38-48
Author(s):  
Laura Elise Seebauer ◽  
Eva Naumann ◽  
Anneke Jacobs ◽  
Myriam Thier ◽  
Gitta A. Jacob

Objective:Guided imagery exercises can have a powerful impact on distressing mental images. Clinically, it is usually recommended to experience these exercises as intensely as possible. However, patients sometimes object to the related instructions. In this study, we tested whether typical clinical instructions aiming at increasing intensity led to a stronger effect of the exercise.Methods:Sixty-four healthy participants watched a trauma movie clip. Then they were pseudo-randomized into one of two strategies (intense, less intense) or a waiting control condition. Dependent variables were self-reported emotional intensity and psychophysiology measures.Results:Participants in the intense ImRS strategy did not experience the exercise as more intense than those in the less intense ImRS strategy on any outcome measure. Both ImRS strategies showed increased sympathetic activation compared to a decrease of activation in the waiting control group.Conclusions:Our results suggest that emotional intensity in guided imagery exercises may not depend very much on the therapist’s instructions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kajal Patel ◽  
James Henshaw ◽  
Heather Sutherland ◽  
Jason R. Taylor ◽  
Alexander J. Casson ◽  
...  

ObjectiveAlpha-neurofeedback (α-NFB) is a novel therapy which trains individuals to volitionally increase their alpha power to improve pain. Learning during NFB is commonly measured using static parameters such as mean alpha power. Considering the biphasic nature of alpha rhythm (high and low alpha), dynamic parameters describing the time spent by individuals in high alpha state and the pattern of transitioning between states might be more useful. Here, we quantify the changes during α-NFB for chronic pain in terms of dynamic changes in alpha states.MethodsFour chronic pain and four healthy participants received five NFB sessions designed to increase frontal alpha power. Changes in pain resilience were measured using visual analogue scale (VAS) during repeated cold-pressor tests (CPT). Changes in alpha state static and dynamic parameters such as fractional occupancy (time in high alpha state), dwell time (length of high alpha state) and transition probability (probability of moving from low to high alpha state) were analyzed using Friedman’s Test and correlated with changes in pain scores using Pearson’s correlation.ResultsThere was no significant change in mean frontal alpha power during NFB. There was a trend of an increase in fractional occupancy, mean dwell duration and transition probability of high alpha state over the five sessions in chronic pain patients only. Significant correlations were observed between change in pain scores and fractional occupancy (r = −0.45, p = 0.03), mean dwell time (r = -0.48, p = 0.04) and transition probability from a low to high state (r = -0.47, p = 0.03) in chronic pain patients but not in healthy participants.ConclusionThere is a differential effect between patients and healthy participants in terms of correlation between change in pain scores and alpha state parameters. Parameters providing a more precise description of the alpha power dynamics than the mean may help understand the therapeutic effect of neurofeedback on chronic pain.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick J. Owen ◽  
Tobias Saueressig ◽  
Daniel L. Belavy ◽  
Christian A. Than ◽  
Jake Ball ◽  
...  

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