Handbook of experimental pharmacology
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Handb Exp Pharmacol · Jan 2014
ReviewGreat expectations: the placebo effect in Parkinson's disease.
Our understanding of the neural mechanisms underlying the placebo effect has increased exponentially in parallel with the advances in brain imaging. This is of particular importance in the field of Parkinson's disease, where clinicians have described placebo effects in their patients for decades. ⋯ Neuroimaging studies have demonstrated that placebos stimulate the release of dopamine in the striatum of patients with Parkinson's disease and can alter the activity of dopamine neurons using single-cell recording. When taken together with the findings from other medical conditions discussed elsewhere in this publication, a unified mechanism for the placebo effect in Parkinson's disease is emerging that blends expectation-induced neurochemical changes and disease-specific nigrostriatal dopamine release.
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Handb Exp Pharmacol · Jan 2014
Meta AnalysisA meta-analysis of brain mechanisms of placebo analgesia: consistent findings and unanswered questions.
Placebo treatments reliably reduce pain in the clinic and in the lab. Because pain is a subjective experience, it has been difficult to determine whether placebo analgesia is clinically relevant. Neuroimaging studies of placebo analgesia provide objective evidence of placebo-induced changes in brain processing and allow researchers to isolate the mechanisms underlying placebo-based pain reduction. ⋯ Other brain regions showed reliable increases in activation with expectations for reduced pain. These included the prefrontal cortex (including dorsolateral, ventromedial, and orbitofrontal cortices), the midbrain surrounding the periaqueductal gray, and the rostral anterior cingulate. We discuss implications of these findings as well as how future studies can expand our understanding of the precise functional contributions of the brain systems identified here.
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Handb Exp Pharmacol · Jan 2014
ReviewProbing gating mechanisms of sodium channels using pore blockers.
Several classes of small molecules and peptides bind at the central pore of voltage-gated sodium channels either from the extracellular or intracellular side of the membrane and block ion conduction through the pore. Biophysical studies that shed light on the chemical nature, accessibility, and kinetics of binding of these naturally occurring and synthetic compounds reveal a wealth of information about how these channels gate. Here, we discuss insights into the structural underpinnings of gating of the channel pore and its coupling to the voltage sensors obtained from pore blockers including site 1 neurotoxins and local anesthetics.
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Handb Exp Pharmacol · Jan 2014
ReviewHow positive and negative expectations shape the experience of visceral pain.
Knowledge from placebo and nocebo research aimed at elucidating the role of treatment expectations and learning experiences in shaping the response to visceral pain fills an important research gap. First, chronic abdominal pain, such as in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), is highly prevalent, with detrimental individual and socioeconomic impact and limited effective treatment options. At the same time, IBS patients show high placebo response rates in clinical trials and benefit from placebo interventions. ⋯ Hence, the study of nocebo and placebo effects in visceral pain constitutes a model to assess the contribution of psychological factors. Herein, the clinical relevance of visceral pain is introduced with a focus on IBS as a bio-psycho-social disorder, followed by a review of existing clinical and experimental work on placebo and nocebo effects in IBS and in clinically relevant visceral pain models. Finally, emerging research trends are highlighted along with an outlook regarding goals for ongoing and future research.
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Handb Exp Pharmacol · Jan 2014
Lessons to be learned from placebo arms in psychopharmacology trials.
Large placebo effects are typically reported in clinical drug trials and evidence suggests placebo effects have increased over time. The diminishing drug-placebo difference calls into question the effectiveness of pharmacological treatments and provides a challenge to prove the effectiveness of new medications. This chapter discusses explanations for the increasing placebo effect. ⋯ It is argued that specific and nonspecific effects interact in drug groups of clinical trials. This interaction influences drug-placebo differences in clinical trials (i.e., trial sensitivity). Future research should aim to identify which patients will respond best to drugs and those who may be better treated with placebos.