• NeuroImage · Apr 2009

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    Expectancy and treatment interactions: a dissociation between acupuncture analgesia and expectancy evoked placebo analgesia.

    • Jian Kong, Ted J Kaptchuk, Ginger Polich, Irving Kirsch, Mark Vangel, Carolyn Zyloney, Bruce Rosen, and Randy Gollub.
    • Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Charlestown, MA 02129, USA. kongj@nmr.mgh.harvard.edu
    • Neuroimage. 2009 Apr 15;45(3):940-9.

    AbstractRecent advances in placebo research have demonstrated the mind's power to alter physiology. In this study, we combined an expectancy manipulation model with both verum and sham acupuncture treatments to address: 1) how and to what extent treatment and expectancy effects - including both subjective pain intensity levels (pain sensory ratings) and objective physiological activations (fMRI) - interact; and 2) if the underlying mechanism of expectancy remains the same whether placebo treatment is given alone or in conjunction with active treatment. The results indicate that although verum acupuncture+high expectation and sham acupuncture+high expectation induced subjective reports of analgesia of equal magnitude, fMRI analysis showed that verum acupuncture produced greater fMRI signal decrease in pain related brain regions during application of calibrated heat pain stimuli on the right arm. We believe our study provides brain imaging evidence for the existence of different mechanisms underlying acupuncture analgesia and expectancy evoked placebo analgesia. Our results also suggest that the brain network involved in expectancy may vary under different treatment situations (verum and sham acupuncture treatment).

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