Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
950988 Journal of Psychosomatic Research 2006 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveInformation that a painkiller has been administrated induces an expectancy of reduced pain, and the expectancy has been shown to reduce pain. This is termed placebo analgesia. We hypothesized that an expectancy of reduced pain reduces stress.MethodsThe present study (N=84) investigated this hypothesis. To further study the effects of stress and emotions on pain, we provided information about the pain stimulus to half the subjects. Pain was induced by the submaximum tourniquet technique.ResultsExpectations and pain information both decreased pain to the same degree, but independently, and only in males. Lower pain was not related to subjective stress, cortisol, or circulating beta-endorphin. All experimenters were women, and the finding of placebo analgesia only in males fits well with findings that males report less pain to female experimenters.ConclusionPlacebo analgesia is not related to stress and is influenced by the social context in which pain is recorded.

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