A team of researchers from Harvard Medical School and the University of Turin Medical School has found that applying direct current to the brain’s right dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex can enhance the placebo effect in patients. In their paper published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,, the group describes experiments they conducted with patients receiving a small jolt of electricity through the skin to a part of the brain just beneath the forehead.
Prior research has shown that people expecting a therapy to reduce pain, even if it actually has no physical impact, can result in reduced feelings of pain. This so-called placebo effect has been found to involve changes in protein signatures in the blood, which in turn reduce the sensation of pain. The opposite effect has been found, as well—if people are expecting something to hurt, it sometimes will hurt more than it should due to the “nocebo effect.” In this new effort, the researchers focused their attention on the right dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex—a part of the brain believed to be involved in both the placebo and nocebo effects.
The experiments involved applying ointments to three parts of the forearm skin of volunteers—they were told one contained lidocaine, another capsaicin and the third had no pain altering chemicals—all of the ointments actually contained no pain altering chemicals. Next, the volunteers were subjected to a pain stimulus to the places on the forearm where the ointments had been applied. After that, the volunteers were divided into three groups. One of the groups received 20 minutes of brain stimulation for three days, the second received inhibiting brain stimulation, and the third group did not receive any stimulation at all. Also, all of the volunteers underwent fMRI scans before, during and after stimulation.
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