• Pain Med · Jun 2018

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    How Classical Conditioning Shapes Placebo Analgesia: Hidden versus Open Conditioning.

    • Przemyslaw Babel, Waclaw Adamczyk, Karolina Swider, Elzbieta A Bajcar, Pawel Kicman, and Natalia Lisinska.
    • Jagiellonian University, Institute of Psychology, Pain Research Group, Kraków, Poland.
    • Pain Med. 2018 Jun 1; 19 (6): 1156-1169.

    ObjectiveTo investigate the influence of expectancy of pain intensity, fear of pain (trait), and fear (state) on the effectiveness of hidden and open conditioning to produce placebo analgesia.MethodsA total of 90 healthy female volunteers were randomly assigned to three groups (hidden conditioning, open conditioning, and control) that received electrical stimuli preceded by either orange or blue lights. One color was paired with painful stimuli (control stimuli) and the other color was paired with nonpainful stimuli (conditioned stimuli) in both the hidden and open conditioning groups. Only participants in the open conditioning group were informed about this association. In the control group, both color lights were followed by control stimuli. In the testing phase, both colored lights were followed by identical control stimuli. Participants rated pain intensity, expectancy of pain intensity, fear, and fear of pain.ResultsA significant analgesic effect was found only in the hidden conditioning group, where no explicit verbal suggestions were provided. Hidden conditioning had an effect on expectancy and fear-participants in the hidden conditioning group expected less pain and experienced less fear in relation to conditioned stimuli. Fear was the only predictor of placebo analgesia in the hidden conditioning group. Neither expectancy of pain intensity nor fear of pain predicted placebo analgesia.ConclusionsFear seems to be a more important factor than expectancy in producing placebo analgesia induced by hidden conditioning.

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