Steven Reinberg, "If You Think You'll Feel Better, You Will", Health
Day, August 24, 2005,
Pain relief may just be mind over matter.
According to new research, the belief that a pill will relieve pain is
enough to cause the brain to release its own natural painkillers.
The finding is the first direct evidence that the brain's own
pain-fighting chemicals, endorphins, have a role in the phenomenon
known as the "placebo effect" -- and that this response corresponds
with a reduction in feelings of pain.
"This is telling us that placebos are powerful," said study lead author
Dr. Jon-Kar Zubieta, an associate professor of psychiatry and radiology
at the University of Michigan. "When there is a belief that something
may take place, this belief actually activates systems in your brain
that are directly modifying experience. If you receive a drug and you
believe it is active, the drug itself might not be doing very much."
The report appears in the Aug. 24 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience.
"We looked at the response of pain control systems in the brain,"
Zubieta said. "We observed that a placebo that was believed to be an
agonistic agent was able to enhance the release of these anti-pain
endogenous opioids."
For the study, Zubieta's team induced pain by injecting concentrated
salt water solution into the jaws of 14 healthy young men who agreed to
the experiment. The injections were given while the men underwent
positron emission tomography (PET) scans.
During one scan, the men were told they would receive pain medicine.
Instead, they were given a placebo. Then every 15 seconds during the
subsequent scans, the men were asked to rate the intensity of their
pain on a scale of 0 to 100. After the experiment, they provided more
detailed pain ratings.
The researchers found that after telling the men that the placebo was
coming, the amount of concentrated salt water needed to maintain the
pain increased. This indicated that sensitivity to pain was reduced. So
thinking they were getting a pain drug actually allowed the
participants to tolerate more pain, the researchers said.
Zubieta classified nine of the men as "high placebo responders" because
they exhibited a strong placebo effect. The other five were classified
as "low placebo responders."
In addition, the researchers were able to show the power of the placebo
effect. "There was more relief in response to this inactive medication
as a function of belief," Zubieta said. "In fact, in some areas of the
brain, the release was related to how much they believed the drug was
going to be effective."
Zubieta believes these findings tell you something about how humans
function. "Understanding these mind-body connections are important," he
said. "There are many treatments that are believed to be effective,
when in reality they may not be more effective than placebo."
Harnessing the placebo effect may have some positive therapeutic
applications, Zubieta said. "You want to enhance the placebo effect
under some circumstances," he said. "And in some others you want to
reduce it --like when you do a clinical trial."
One expert thinks the findings are important, but miss the larger
point.
"It's clearly another step in elucidating these mechanisms, which is
really terrific," said Daniel E. Moerman, the William E. Stirton
Professor of Anthropology at the University of Michigan in Dearborn,
and the author of Meaning, Medicine and the Placebo Effect.
But he added, the question of a mind-body connection as a separation
between the two "is not even 16th-century quality thinking," Moerman
said. "Socrates did better than that."
"It's only the technology that has made this an interesting area to
study," Moerman added. "You can scan this stuff now. You can see it, so
there it is, and therefore it's sort of real."
OneTiredGrandma - 11 Oct 2005 03:45 GMT
If only that were true for everyone!
> Steven Reinberg, "If You Think You'll Feel Better, You Will", Health
> Day, August 24, 2005,
>
> Pain relief may just be mind over matter.
<snipped for brevity>
Grandpa Chuck - 11 Oct 2005 04:17 GMT
>X-No-Archive: yes
>
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
>>
>> Pain relief may just be mind over matter.
Yes, if you don't mind it doesn't matter.
--
Grandpa Chuck
-ô¿ô-
~
A candle loses nothing by lighting another candle.
Love is giving all with no conditions.
Love is expecting nothing in return.
Mick - 11 Oct 2005 07:49 GMT
> Steven Reinberg, "If You Think You'll Feel Better, You Will", Health
> Day, August 24, 2005,
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> According to new research, the belief that a pill will relieve pain is
> enough to cause the brain to release its own natural painkillers.
Gimme some dat. I wanna my head to keep me from hurtin.
> The finding is the first direct evidence that the brain's own
> pain-fighting chemicals, endorphins, have a role in the phenomenon
> known as the "placebo effect" -- and that this response corresponds
> with a reduction in feelings of pain.
Just because we're people n pain some jerks think we are stupid, that
we have never heard of this before. They think we haven't read, studied
about everything we can find about our chronic pain.
<snip snip>
These people are insulting.
Harvey R. Stone - 11 Oct 2005 12:28 GMT
>> Steven Reinberg, "If You Think You'll Feel Better, You Will", Health
>> Day, August 24, 2005,
[quoted text clipped - 18 lines]
>
> These people are insulting.
But on the positive side,,,, it is why we need to be positive about the
medicine we take and what it will do for us.
A story that I have told here before is about a procedure done on the
brain to help stop people from having seizures. The placebo was to just
close up the skull without doing any procedure on the brain. She went 6
months without a seizure until they told her the truth and less than a week
later she had a bad one. The brain is very powerful.
Having said that,,,,it can not handle bone on bone in one of our joints
or the spine. Anyone that says to mind over matter with that should have a
few new lumps on their head to worry about.
Harv
Jay - 12 Oct 2005 23:01 GMT
The placebo efect is very well known, however few people actually respond to
placebo's (although some do) which is why placebo's are used in double blind
medical trials - because of the relativley low number of people who
experience the placebo effect.
Current psychological data would indicate that a person would need to truley
belive they were taking a wonder drug or undertaking a breakthrough
procedure. Many pschologists agree that the reason placebo effect is lower
than average amongst long term sufferers of chronic illnesses is because of
the sufferers knowledge of their own illness and find it hard to belive in
"wonder drugs" and "miracle procedures" because we are used to disapointment
and low/short term effects of new treatments.
I do agree however that it is an exciting area of research; if scientists
can learn how the brain is able to produce the results associated with
placebo effects it may be possible for them to a develop a way to activate
this ability within the brain. That would be a very exciting prospect.
Until then I will treat these placebo reports (which are not new idea, one
appears at least once a year!) with the same amount attention I usally give
them (not very much at all).
On a personal note while I agree this is an exciting area for study,
researches etc. need to be careful in their wording. Sometimes instead of
hearing "we are working to help you" we hear "It's all in your head".
Jay
> Steven Reinberg, "If You Think You'll Feel Better, You Will", Health
> Day, August 24, 2005,
[quoted text clipped - 75 lines]
> study," Moerman added. "You can scan this stuff now. You can see it, so
> there it is, and therefore it's sort of real."
healthyhabit@aol.com - 17 Oct 2005 18:04 GMT
For me matter has always won. I don't know if nerve damge pain is
different but from my experience it is. I've tried every trick in the
book and I just keep getting worse. I was told that it was only going
to get worse 8 years ago when they found out I had nerve damage, I
didn't believe them but they where rite and almost every day was worse
than the day before.
You can't say this is going to work for everone.