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http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn7892
Placebos trigger an opioid hit in the brain
22:00 23 August 2005
NewScientist.com news service
It seems that placebos have a real physical, not imagined, effect –
activating the production of chemicals in the brain that relieve pain,
a new study suggests.
Placebos are treatments that use substances which have no active
ingredient. But if people are told that what they are being given contains
an
active painkiller, for example, they often feel less pain – an effect
that has
normally been considered psychological.
Recent studies, though, suggest otherwise. For example, when a placebo
was secretly mixed with a drug that blocks endorphins – the body’s
natural
painkillers – there was no placebo effect, showing that endorphins
are
involved in the placebo painkiller process (New Scientist print
edition, 26 May 2001, p 34).
Now Jon-Kar Zubieta’s team at the University of Michigan at Ann
Arbor,
US, has confirmed that placebos relieve pain by boosting the release of
endorphins.
Pain maintainer
Fourteen healthy males in their twenties volunteered to try what they
were told was “a medication that may or may not relieve pain”.
To induce
pain, the researchers gave the young men infusions into the jaw that made
them ache.
During the experiment, the volunteers had to rate the intensity of pain
every 15 seconds on a scale of 1 to 100; most judged it to be about 30.
Unbeknown to them, the measure was used to keep pain constant by
increasing or decreasing the infusion of the pain-inducer.
This pain management was necessary because the body’s own opioids
– the
endorphins – tend to alleviate pain slightly over time, and the
researchers wanted to separate this effect from that caused by the placebo.
PET detective All the volunteers, who were given a placebo of salt solution,
reported
feeling less pain. But the researchers did not simply take their word
for it: instead, they scanned the volunteers’ brains using positron
emission tomography (PET). They had injected the volunteers with a radioactive
tracer that binds to the same mu-opioid receptors as endorphins do, which
allowed them to figure out the level of endorphins produced in each volunteer’s
brain.
The young men, who acted as their own controls, were scanned three
times: before the experiment began, when they were in pain but had not
yet
been given the placebo, and after they had been given the placebo. Half
the
volunteers experienced the pain-only condition first, while the other
half got the benefit of the placebo first.
The scans revealed that after the volunteers took the placebo, their
brains released more pain-relieving endorphins than normal. Zubieta thinks
the
placebo effect is piggybacking on the body’s innate painkilling
system.
“[The system] is there to ensure the survival of the organism,”
he
says. “The placebo effect is acting through these mechanisms.”
But exactly
how it does this remains a mystery.
Journal reference: The Journal of Neuroscience (vol 25, p 7754)
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