• Pain management · Jul 2013

    Placebo and nocebo: how to enhance therapies and avoid unintended sabotage to pain treatment.

    • Serge Marchand and Isabelle Gaumond.
    • Université de Sherbrooke, Medicine, Centre de Recherche Clinique Étienne-Le Bel du CHUS, 3001 12e Avenue Nord, Sherbrooke, Québec, J1H 5N4, Canada.
    • Pain Manag. 2013 Jul 1;3(4):285-94.

    AbstractSUMMARY There is good evidence showing that placebo and nocebo responses do not only reflect a psychological reappraisal of an unchanged nociceptive activity. There are several scientific evidences indicating that placebo or nocebo responses trigger changes in the brain that activate descending modulatory mechanisms, affecting the nociceptive signal early in the CNS. Among the psychological factors that trigger a placebo or nocebo response, conditioning and expectation have been demonstrated to greatly affect the outcomes of pain perception, but also the response to treatment. Placebo or nocebo responses can be triggered without the administration of an inert substance in several therapeutic contexts and will affect the treatment outcome. In this article, we will describe different experimental situations where psychological factors produce physiological changes of the nociceptive signal in the brain, and how these changes are reflected in the spinal cord. Finally, we will discuss the importance of better understanding placebo and nocebo mechanisms in clinical contexts for pain treatment.

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