Journal of Neurophysiology<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\nAny improvements in the patients were assessed by a) measuring muscle rigidity at the wrist and b) measuring the activity of individual neurons in the thalamus of the brain.<\/p>\n
The patients were initially given a placebo and the scientists measured their responses. After one placebo, there was no clinical improvement and no changes in individual neurons.<\/p>\n
Next, a patient was given an injection of the anti-Parkinson\u2019s drug, apomorphine. The following day they were due to receive their second injection of apomorphine but it was secretly swapped for a placebo injection. Even though they received a placebo, there was a measureable clinical improvement and an increase in activity of neurons on receiving the placebo.<\/p>\n
That wasn\u2019t the half of it though. If they received two doses of apomorphine before the placebo, the clinical improvement and neuronal activation was ever greater, and greater still after receiving three prior doses of apomorphine, and even greater yet if they received four doses before their placebo.<\/p>\n
The rule they found was this: \u201cThe greater the number of previous apomorphine administrations, the larger the magnitude and the longer the duration of the clinical and neuronal placebo responses.\u201d<\/p>\n
Amazingly, in patients who received a placebo after four previous administrations of apomorphine, the placebo gave them the exact same physical improvement as the drug did.<\/p>\n
In other words, once the person (and their brain) learns what to expect from a drug, the drug can be swapped for a placebo \u2013 at least in the case of apomorphine and Parkinson\u2019s disease.<\/p>\n
It\u2019s important to point out here that this is not just \u2018all in the mind\u2019 or that only \u2018weak minded, or gullible, people\u2019 respond to placebos, which is a common sceptical response.<\/p>\n
Let\u2019s think about it for a second: The study showed actual<\/em> physical changes in the brain when a person received a placebo. It is certainly not \u2018all in the mind\u2019. And I would argue, in fact, that it takes a strong<\/u> mind to cause these physical and neurological changes!<\/p>\n It is these brain changes that lead to physical improvement. So rather than it being \u2018all in the mind\u2019, the mind, in fact, causes neurological changes in the brain.<\/p>\n
Indeed, many previous studies have shown that expectation drives the placebo effect. Benedetti defines a placebo as: \u201cThe administration of an inert treatment along with a positive psychosocial context inducing positive expectations of clinical improvement<\/em>.\u201d<\/p>\nThat is: a patient expects a result and this expectation alters their biochemistry to bring them the result that they are expecting.<\/p>\n
Think of what this means. A placebo is an empty pill. Typically made of sugar or chalk, it has no pharmacologically active ingredients. But in the mind of the person receiving it, she or he imagines it to be a medicine that will bring them relief or improvement.<\/p>\n
It is this imagined, expectation of improvement that activates the placebo response, altering activity in the brain and delivering the person the very result that they are expecting.<\/p>\n
So, given that healthcare seems to be all about money these days \u2013 of course, it\u2019s about health, really, but everything seems to have a price tag! \u2013 I wonder how much scope there is, given further research, to swap some drugs for placebos after a person\u2019s brain has learned what the drug does.<\/p>\n
Now we\u2019re really entering the days of taking seriously that the mind impacts the body quite significantly.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"
Imagine how much money the NHS or medical insurance companies would save if we could swap some of our drugs for placebos after a few days of taking them? As far as some exciting new research is concerned, it certainly seems to be a possibility. A placebo is an empty pill; that much most people…<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":6,"featured_media":2664,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[87,21],"tags":[12,94,20,184],"yoast_head":"\n
Can your brain learn to respond to a placebo? - David R Hamilton PHD<\/title>\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n