Healthy Volunteers Clinical Trial
Official title:
Relaxing Effects of Acupuncture, Sham Acupuncture or no Acupuncture, Given by Therapists Delivering Positive or Neutral Communication Regarding Expected Effects
Background: The communication between a patient and clinician may have significant effects on
treatment outcomes and one likely mediator of the communication-related treatment effects is
patient expectations, as demonstrated by placebo studies in various clinical domains. To
investigate the link between patient-clinician interactions and patient expectancy in a
clinical setting, acupuncture is suggested an effective method, as acupuncture is a procedure
with known non-specific treatment components. As a scene for investigating the importance of
expectations on treatment outcomes, the investigators used acupuncture for relaxation
effects. It is commonly reported that participants experience a sense of relaxation during
acupuncture treatment, yet, it is not known if the effects are related to the specific
effects of needling or non-specific effects associated with the treatment procedure.
Aim: To investigate if communication type (positive or neutral) about the expected treatment
outcome affected i) participants' expectations, ii) short-term relaxation effects in response
to genuine or sham acupuncture or to rest, and to investigate if treatment expectations were
related to outcome.
Procedure: Volunteers, i.e. Swedish individuals in general, not part of any specific patient
group, are given written and oral study information and are screened for study criteria. The
volunteers giving informed consent are randomized to one treatment session a´30 minutes with
a) genuine acupuncture or b) sham acupuncture (telescopic non-penetrating needles).
They are compared to a non-randomized reference group that receive no acupuncture, just 30
minutes of rest.
Within the three groups, participants are randomized to 1) positive communication or 2)
neutral communication from therapists, regarding expected treatment effects.
Outcome measures: Visual analogue scales (VAS) (0-100 millimeter) measured treatment
expectations and relaxation, at baseline two hours before the treatment session, pre
treatment (directly before the treatment session) and post treatment (directly after the
treatment session). Heart rate, blood pressure, and salivary cortisol are measured pre and
post treatment. Primary endpoint is change in relaxation pre to post treatment.
Background: The communication between a patient and clinician may have significant effects on
treatment outcomes and one likely mediator of the communication-related treatment effects is
patient expectations, as demonstrated by placebo studies in various clinical domains. To
investigate the link between patient-clinician interactions and patient expectancy in a
clinical setting, acupuncture is suggested an effective method, as acupuncture is a procedure
with known non-specific treatment components. As a scene for investigating the importance of
expectations on treatment outcomes, the investigators used acupuncture for relaxation
effects. It is commonly reported that participants experience a sense of relaxation during
acupuncture treatment, yet, it is not known if the effects are related to the specific
effects of needling or non-specific effects associated with the treatment procedure.
Aim: To investigate if communication type (positive or neutral) about the expected treatment
outcome affected i) participants' expectations, ii) short-term relaxation effects in response
to genuine or sham acupuncture or to rest, and to investigate if treatment expectations were
related to outcome.
Procedure: Volunteers, i.e. Swedish individuals in general, not part of any specific patient
group, are given written and oral study information and are screened for study criteria. The
volunteers giving informed consent are blinded randomized, by use of a computerized random
table, to one treatment session a´30 minutes with a) genuine manual acupuncture delivered to
the traditional acupuncture point PC6 or b) sham acupuncture delivered to a sham acupuncture
point at the double distance to the wrist compared to the PC6, using telescopic
non-penetrating needles. The acupuncture treatments (genuine or sham) was given by one of
nine physiotherapists.
They are compared to a non-randomized reference group that receive no acupuncture, just a
treatment of 30 minutes of rest, given by one of three physiotherapists according to a
standardized treatment protocol.
Within the three groups (genuine acupuncture, sham acupuncture or no acupuncture, just rest),
the participants are randomized to 1) positive communication or 2) neutral communication from
therapists according to a standardized treatment protocol, regarding expected treatment
effects.
The participants are blinded to type of acupuncture and communication type. The investigator
entering data is blinded to treatment type and communication type. The evaluator is blinded
to treatment type and communication type.
Outcome measures: Visual analogue scales (VAS) (0-100 millimeter) measure treatment
expectations and level of relaxation, muscle tensions and stress at baseline two hours before
the treatment session, pre treatment (directly before the treatment session) and post
treatment (directly after the treatment session). Heart rate, blood pressure, and salivary
cortisol are measured pre and post treatment. Primary endpoint is change in level of
relaxation pre to post treatment.
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