Journal of affective disorders | 2021

Placebo nasal spray protects female participants from experimentally induced sadness and concomitant changes in autonomic arousal.

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


BACKGROUND\nTo investigate the powerful placebo effects in antidepressant drug trials and their mechanisms, recent pioneering experimental studies showed that expectation manipulation combined with an active placebo attenuated induced sadness. In the present study, we aimed at extending these findings by assessing the psychophysiological response in addition to mere self-report.\n\n\nMETHODS\nOne hundred and thirteen healthy female students were randomly assigned to a drug expectation group (active placebo, positive treatment expectation), placebo expectation group (active placebo, no treatment expectation), or a no-treatment group (no placebo, no treatment expectation). After placebo intake, sadness was induced by self-deprecating statements using the Velten method combined with sad music, including a rumination phase. Sadness was measured using the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule Expanded Form (PANAS-X). Heart rate and skin conductance were assessed continuously.\n\n\nRESULTS\nAfter mood induction and after rumination, self-reported sadness was significantly lower, and skin conductance level was significantly higher, in the drug expectation group than in the no-treatment group. The mood induction was further accompanied by a heart rate deceleration within all groups.\n\n\nLIMITATIONS\nGeneralizability is limited by sample selectivity and focusing on sadness as a symptom of depression, exclusively.\n\n\nCONCLUSION\nExpectation-induced placebo effects significantly influenced sadness-correlated changes in autonomic arousal, and not only subjectively reported sadness, indicating that placebo effects in the context of affect are not merely due to subjective response bias. The systematic modification of treatment expectation could be utilized in clinical practice to optimize current therapeutic approaches to improve mood regulation.

Volume 295
Pages \n 131-138\n
DOI 10.1016/j.jad.2021.07.037
Language English
Journal Journal of affective disorders

Full Text