Acute Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Influence of Vasopressin on Observational Learning of Placebo Analgesia
The feeling of pain is not just a sensory experience, but is also influenced by emotions, beliefs and expectations, making pain a highly subjective experience. This is evident in clinical practice, where the behavior of the physician and the treatment context can strongly influence the pain experience of patients. Research has shown that patients' expectation that a treatment will reduce pain influences individual perception of pain, even if the treatment has no active ingredient. The expectancy-induced analgesia emerges due to a modulation of the individual pain experience of patients by an engagement of endogenous inhibitory systems in the central nervous system. The development of expectancy-induced analgesia can be generated in several ways. The investigators have previously demonstrated that social information and observational learning (e.g. the patient observes analgesia in another person receiving a treatment) can lead to expectancy-induced analgesia and pain reduction. However, the neural mechanisms (mechanisms in the brain) of how these expectancies are acquired and the neural mechanisms of analgesia induced by observational learning are unknown. The investigators recently established a procedure to investigate neural mechanisms of observational learning in placebo analgesia. Here the investigators propose to investigate the influence of vasopressin, a neurotransmitter that is important for social interaction, on observational learning. The investigators will use functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), a non-invasive method, to investigate neural activity in humans. Participants will either receive vasopressin or saline with a nasal spray. During fMRI scanning, participants will then undergo an observational learning phase, where the study participants will learn the experience of analgesia in another person through a video, and a testing phase, where participants will perceive painful stimulations with the same cues as the observational phase. The comparison of the vasopressin group and the saline group will allow us to investigate how vasopressin influences behavioral effects of observational learning on pain perception as well as its effect on the neural processing of observational learning. A better understanding of how the human brain processes observationally-induced analgesia would allow us to improve the therapeutic context of pain treatments by increasing the contextual factors which help patients cope with pain.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 90 |
Est. completion date | December 31, 2026 |
Est. primary completion date | June 30, 2026 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 65 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Age ( 18-55 years old) - English speaker (written and spoken) Exclusion Criteria: - Cardiovascular, neurological diseases, pulmonary abnormalities, kidney disease, liver disease, degenerative neuromuscular disease, history of cancer within past 3 years - Any history of chronic pain disorder or currently in pain - Severe psychiatric condition (e.g. schizophrenia, bipolar disorders, mania, autism) and /or psychiatric condition leading to treatment and/or hospitalization within the last 3 years. - Family (first degree) history of mania, schizophrenia, or other psychoses - Lifetime alcohol/drug dependence or alcohol/drug abuse in past 3 months - Pregnancy or breast feeding - Color-blindness - Impaired, uncorrected hearing - History of angioedema - High blood pressure (above 140 mmHg) or symptomatic low blood pressure - History of fainting - Left handed - Allergies or sensitivities to creams, lotions or food coloring - Any non-organic implant or any non-removable metal device (e.g. pacemaker, cochlear implants, stents, surgical clips, non-removable piercings) - Any prior eye injury or the potential of a foreign body in the eye (e.g. worked in metal fields)Persisting functional impairment due to a head trauma - Fear of closed spaces - Any other contraindications for MRI (e.g. large tattoos on head and neck) - Previously participated in a "Pain Perception in the Brain" Study - Failed drug test (testing for opiates, cocaine, methamphetamines, amphetamines and THC) |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Luana Colloca | Baltimore | Maryland |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Maryland, Baltimore |
United States,
Born J, Lange T, Kern W, McGregor GP, Bickel U, Fehm HL. Sniffing neuropeptides: a transnasal approach to the human brain. Nat Neurosci. 2002 Jun;5(6):514-6. doi: 10.1038/nn849. No abstract available. — View Citation
Colagiuri B, Schenk LA, Kessler MD, Dorsey SG, Colloca L. The placebo effect: From concepts to genes. Neuroscience. 2015 Oct 29;307:171-90. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2015.08.017. Epub 2015 Aug 10. — View Citation
Colloca L, Benedetti F. Placebo analgesia induced by social observational learning. Pain. 2009 Jul;144(1-2):28-34. doi: 10.1016/j.pain.2009.01.033. Epub 2009 Mar 10. — View Citation
Colloca L, Pine DS, Ernst M, Miller FG, Grillon C. Vasopressin Boosts Placebo Analgesic Effects in Women: A Randomized Trial. Biol Psychiatry. 2016 May 15;79(10):794-802. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2015.07.019. Epub 2015 Aug 4. — View Citation
Schenk LA, Sprenger C, Geuter S, Buchel C. Expectation requires treatment to boost pain relief: an fMRI study. Pain. 2014 Jan;155(1):150-157. doi: 10.1016/j.pain.2013.09.024. Epub 2013 Sep 26. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Implicit Association Test (IAT) Response Latency Difference | The IAT is a behavioral test that examines racial biases via measuring the strength of associations between concepts (e.g., African-American, Asian, White) and evaluations (good, bad). Participants were asked to press a response key when they saw images (people) or words (good/bad) on the screen. Response latencies (RL) were measured in milliseconds using E-prime as the reaction time to press the response key. An RL difference (D) score was calculated as 1) Compute the standard deviation (SD) of RL from overall trials; 2) M1 is the mean of RL in the condition where "White" and "good" share the same response key. M2 is the mean of RL in the condition where "African-American/Asian people" and "good" share the same response key; 3) D = (M2-M1)/SD.
The D score ranges from -2 to +2. Positive values indicate a racial preference for White people. Negative values indicate a racial preference for African-American/Black or Asian people. A value close to 0 indicates no racial preference. |
Day 1 | |
Primary | Change in BOLD Singal in Supplementary Motor Area Compared to Whole Brain Average During the Painful Stimulation | Blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) responses will allow the identification of relative activation/deactivation in the brain as a result of events (e.g. painful stimulations) that will be given during the experiment.
Changes in the Percentage of BOLD signal are calculated as the BOLD signal in the right supplementary motor area during the 20-second heat pain divided by the whole-brain average BOLD signal during that 20-second heat pain. |
Day 2, the average of 24 trials of painful stimulations with each stimulation lasting 20 seconds | |
Secondary | Heating Temperature | On Day 1, the heating temperature was calibrated to the individual level. The heating temperature corresponding to 50 out of 100 visual analog scale pain ratings was selected as the testing temperature for day 2 (test). | Day 1 (calibration) | |
Secondary | Pain Ratings | Participants will provide their pain on a Visual Analogue Scale raging from 0=no pain to 100= maximum unbearable pain. Normal value will be absence of pain. | Day 2 (test) |
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