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Psychobiological Mechanisms of Placebo and Nocebo Effects in the Treatment of Chronic Back Pain

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Chronic Lower Back Pain
Healthy Control Subjects
Interventions
Other: Administration of a pharmacological placebo
Registration Number
NCT02157389
Lead Sponsor
Central Institute of Mental Health, Mannheim
Brief Summary

Placebo and nocebo responses have mainly been studied in healthy humans for pharmacological rather than psychological interventions. Moreover, only few studies examined patients or tested how previous experience and attitudes affect placebo and nocebo responses. On the psychological level expectancy and classical conditioning have been identified as two primary mechanisms. Both seem to be important with classical conditioning potentially having more long-term effects and expectancy being more important in nocebo effects. There is some initial evidence from the investigators own research that patients may be more prone to these effects and the investigators have also shown that placebo effects may last up to several years after treatment. The investigators therefore examine previous attitudes to pharmacological interventions for chronic pain in patients with chronic back pain and subdivide them into groups with high of low belief in the respective treatment modality. The investigators then apply a pharmacological placebo and study the interaction between the prevailing attitude (implicit and explicit) and the placebo effect with respect to pain perception but also to neurobiological mechanisms using functional magnetic resonance imaging. In addition to expectancy, conditioning of placebo will be examined and the long-term effects of the intervention will be determined.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
80
Inclusion Criteria
  • Male and female human subjects with chronic back pain (chronic persistent and recurrent pain > 6 months)
  • Age between 18 and 65
  • Voluntary participation.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Acute or chronic somatic diseases and inflammatory, neuropathic or tumor-related pain
  • Acute and chronic mental disorders according to DSM-IV (except for comorbid anxiety or depression, which are frequent in chronic pain)
  • Insufficient German language skills
  • Cognitive limitations
  • Intake of opioid medication or tranquilizers
  • Metal implants or electric implants that cannot be removed
  • Pregnancy
  • Claustrophobia
  • History of epilepsy, brain trauma, or brain tumor

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
placeboAdministration of a pharmacological placeboAdministration of a pharmacological placebo (sodium chloride) via transdermal application to investigate the influence on pain perception in chronic back pain patients and to investigate the influence of attitude and experience with medication on the placebo effect
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Changes in pain intensity and pain unpleasantness ratings after placebo interventionimmediatey to one week
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Changes in neuronal activity in response to painful stimulation after placebo administrationimmediately
Changes in movement abilities after placebo administrationimmediately to one week

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Central Institute of Mental Health

🇩🇪

Mannheim, Germany

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