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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT03898141
Other study ID # 006-19-1
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date March 27, 2019
Est. completion date July 2, 2019

Study information

Verified date July 2019
Source University of Basel
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

An increased interest of animal-assisted interventions (AAI) can be observed within clinical practice, even though it is still not entirely clear how the presence of an animal contributes to the outcome of a treatment. One theory maintains that the presence of an animal influences the relationship between health-provider and patient, which then in turn affects the outcome of the treatment. To investigate this theory, this study will combine AAI with a placebo intervention, as placebo interventions offer the basic form of intervention working through relationship and expectancy.

The effects of the presence of a dog will be assessed with a standardized experimental heat pain paradigm (TSA-II) in a randomized controlled trial in healthy participants (N=128). After a baseline measurements of heat pain threshold and tolerance, participants will be randomly assigned to one of the following four conditions: a) analgesia-expectation, no dog present, b) analgesia-expectation, dog present, c) no-expectation, no dog present and d) no-expectation, dog present.

The dog will be introduced after randomization. Expectancy will be induced by a deceptive cream which is said to helps against pain. Afterwards, posttreatment measurements will be conducted and participants fill in questionnaires about their perceptions of the experimenter.


Description:

Upon arrival, all participants will be asked to read the study information again and sign to confirm their informed consent. They will also be asked to complete the sociodemographic data (SDD) questionnaire.

During the experiment there will be three points of questionnaire-assessment. The following questionnaires will be used: expectancy will be assessed with the Expectancy of Relief Scale. Expectancy of Relief Scale is adapted to the scaling of the primary outcome. Expectancy has been measured in previous studies. It should detect if participants expectancy changes after the intervention phase. Further, it would also be interested to examine if the presence or absence of a dog has an impact on expectancy.

Furthermore, following each pain stimuli participants will be asked to complete two short questions on pain intensity and unpleasantness. Pain intensity and unpleasantness are adapted to the scaling of the primary outcome. Subjective pain intensity and unpleasantness are commonly assessed pain dimensions in heat pain paradigm studies. Intensity entails the cognitive dimensions of pain, whereas unpleasantness comprises the affective dimension of pain. Also, after each pain stimuli participants will complete the Counselor Rating Form-Short (CRF-S) to assess they perception of the experimenter.

After pain measurement, there will be a final assessment, using the credibility and effectiveness of the placebo analgesia expectation (CMQ; adapted Version of the Context Model Questionnaire), as well as the CRF-S and a short questionnaire on participants attitude towards dogs and pets (AAPL questionnaire). Study factors, dependent variables and schedule of the study are represented in Tables 1 and 2.

Before starting with the experimental procedures all participants will be introduced to the TSA-II de-vice and the study procedure. All participants will be assigned to a baseline assessment of heat tolerance and threshold. Participants will be randomized to the four experimental conditions (see below) followed by experimentally induced pain using an established and standardized heat pain paradigm: Heat stimuli will be administered to the right volar forearm using a 30x 30-mm Peltier device (Medoc, Ramatishai, Israel; TSA-II) placed at 2/3 of the distance from wrist to elbow. Heat pain threshold will be determined by the methods of limits. Temperature will be increased from the baseline (32°C) at a rate of 0.5°C /s. Participants are instructed to press the button to determine the turning point from perceiving warmth to the perception of pain. When the pain threshold has been reached, the device will resume from its baseline (32 °C) with a rise of 0.5 °C/s. This procedure will be repeated three times (Locher et al., 2017). Pain threshold will be defined as the average of the three measurements. Pain tolerance will also be determined by the method of limits: Participants will be asked to stop the increasing heat stimulus at the moment they cannot stand the heat any longer. Three measurements will start at 32 °C, with a rise of 0.5 °C/s. Heat tolerance will be defined as the average of the three measurements. Pain threshold will always be measured prior to pain tolerance in order to minimize interference between pain threshold and tolerance. After pain induction, participants will complete in the CMQ and the CRF-S questionnaires to detect how they perceive the experimenter. All instructions will be conveyed in a standardized manner to ensure that the participant-experimenter relationship is comparable in terms of friendliness and attention across all four conditions.

Experimental conditions:

- Placebo condition (PL): Participants will receive verbal information that they are receiving an analgesic cream (i.e. ""Antidolor, containing Lidocain "), which has been shown to produce significant pain reduction in previous clinical trials. However, they will receive an inert cream.

- Animal-assisted placebo condition (AAPL): Participants receive the same verbal information as in the PL condition. Additionally, they will be told that a dog will be present during the experiment to examine whether animals can be present during experimental studies or if they are too big of a distraction. Prior to the pain assessment, participants are allowed to greet the dog. The intensity of interaction will be documented and be rated on a scale from 1-5 (1=very low degree of interaction, 5=very high degree of interaction). During the experiment the dog will be lying in the room with some distance to participants to avoid further physical interaction. The dog will always be lying at the same spot. Therefore, the distance between participant and dog will always be the same. However, participants will still be able to see the dog.

- Dog only condition (DO): Participants will be told that a dog will be present during the experiment to examine whether animals can be present during experimental studies or if they are too big of a distraction. Prior to the pain assessment, participants are allowed to greet the dog. The intensity of interaction will be documented and be rated on a scale from 1-5 (1=very low degree of interaction, 5=very high degree of interaction). During the experiment the dog will be lying in the room with some distance to participants to avoid further physical interaction. During the experiment the dog will be lying in the room with some distance to participants to avoid further physical interaction. The dog will always be lying at the same spot. Therefore, the distance between participant and dog will always be the same. However, participants will still be able to see the dog. After the introduction of the dog, participant will have the verbal information that the applied cream only moisturizes the skin to allow accurate pain measurements.

- No Dog condition (ND): Participants will participant will have the verbal information that the applied cream only moisturizes the skin to allow accurate pain measurements.

After the intervention, pain induction will then be performed for a second time (test phase) and participants complete the CMQ, CRF-S and AAPL questionnaires. Finally, participants will be fully debriefed about the real aims of the experiment (delayed informed consent). The expected study duration will be 70 minutes.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 132
Est. completion date July 2, 2019
Est. primary completion date July 2, 2019
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Age = 18 years

- Right-handedness

Exclusion Criteria:

- Being scared of dogs or dog hair allergy by self-report

- Any acute or chronic disease (chronic pain, hypertension, heart disease, renal disease, liver disease, diabetes) as well as skin pathologies, neuropathies or nerve entrapment symptoms, sensory abnormalities affecting the tactile or thermal modality

- Current medications (psychoactive medication, narcotics, intake of analgesics) or being currently in psychological or psychiatric treatment

- Insufficient German language skills to understand the instructions

- Previous participation in studies using pain assessment with Peltier Devices

- Current or regular drug consumption (THC, cocaine, heroin, etc.)

- pregnancy

- nursing women

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Other:
Placebo (PL)
Participants will get deceptive and receive an inert cream (=placebo intervention) that "reduces pain".
Dog only (DO)
In the dog intervention a dog will be present during the second measurements. However, participants will only learn the true aims of the presence of the dog after the study (delayed informed consent).
Animal-assisted placebo (AAPL)
Participants receive the placebo intervention in the presence of a dog.

Locations

Country Name City State
Switzerland Division Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, Faculty of Psychology, University of Basel Basel Base-Stadt

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Basel Prof. Undine Lang, University Psychiatric Clinics (UPK), Basel, Switzerland

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Switzerland, 

References & Publications (8)

Hermann C, Hohmeister J, Demirakça S, Zohsel K, Flor H. Long-term alteration of pain sensitivity in school-aged children with early pain experiences. Pain. 2006 Dec 5;125(3):278-85. Epub 2006 Oct 2. — View Citation

Hsieh C, Kong J, Kirsch I, Edwards RR, Jensen KB, Kaptchuk TJ, Gollub RL. Well-loved music robustly relieves pain: a randomized, controlled trial. PLoS One. 2014 Sep 11;9(9):e107390. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0107390. eCollection 2014. — View Citation

Krummenacher P, Candia V, Folkers G, Schedlowski M, Schönbächler G. Prefrontal cortex modulates placebo analgesia. Pain. 2010 Mar;148(3):368-74. doi: 10.1016/j.pain.2009.09.033. Epub 2009 Oct 28. — View Citation

Krummenacher P, Kossowsky J, Schwarz C, Brugger P, Kelley JM, Meyer A, Gaab J. Expectancy-induced placebo analgesia in children and the role of magical thinking. J Pain. 2014 Dec;15(12):1282-93. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2014.09.005. Epub 2014 Sep 23. — View Citation

Locher C, Frey Nascimento A, Kirsch I, Kossowsky J, Meyer A, Gaab J. Is the rationale more important than deception? A randomized controlled trial of open-label placebo analgesia. Pain. 2017 Dec;158(12):2320-2328. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000001012. — View Citation

Oldfield RC. The assessment and analysis of handedness: the Edinburgh inventory. Neuropsychologia. 1971 Mar;9(1):97-113. — View Citation

Petersen GL, Finnerup NB, Nørskov KN, Grosen K, Pilegaard HK, Benedetti F, Price DD, Jensen TS, Vase L. Placebo manipulations reduce hyperalgesia in neuropathic pain. Pain. 2012 Jun;153(6):1292-300. doi: 10.1016/j.pain.2012.03.011. Epub 2012 Apr 13. — View Citation

Price DD. Psychological and neural mechanisms of the affective dimension of pain. Science. 2000 Jun 9;288(5472):1769-72. Review. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Other Pain expectancy by the VAS scale (visual analogue scale) This should detect if participants expectancy changes after the intervention phase and if eventually the presence of a dog has an impact on expectancy.
VAS scale ranges from 0-10 (0 = no pain at all; 10= the worst imaginable pain)
5 minutes
Primary Heat pain tolerance assessed by TSA-II Heat stimuli will be administered to the right volar forearm using a 30x 30-mm Peltier device (Medoc, Ramatishai, Israel; TSA-II) placed at 2/3 of the distance from wrist to elbow. Pain tolerance will be determined by the method of limits: Participants will be asked to stop the increasing heat stimulus at the moment they cannot stand the heat any longer. Three measurements will start at 32 °C, with a rise of 0.5 °C/s. Heat tolerance will be defined as the average of the three measurements. 30 minutes
Secondary Participants perception of the experimenter I Participants perception of the experimenter will be conducted via the KMS (Adapted version of the Context Model Questionnaire CMQ) questionnaire twice, after each pain induction phase (baseline and posttreatment).
KMF has 16 items with a scale from 1-5 (1= not at all, 5= very much, with a higher score indicating a better outcome. All items will be analyzed individual.
15 minutes
Secondary Participants perception of the experimenter II Participants perception of the experimenter will also be conducted via the CRF-S questionnaire (Counselor Rating Form Short) twice, after each pain induction phase (baseline and posttreatment).
CRF-S questions contains 12 items on a scale from 1-7 (1= not much, 7= very much, with a higher score indicating a better outcome. All items will be analyzed individual.
15 minutes
Secondary Heat pain threshold assessed by TSA-II Heat pain threshold will be determined by the methods of limits. Temperature will be increased from the baseline (32°C) at a rate of 0.5°C /s. Participants are instructed to press the button to determine the turning point from perceiving warmth to the perception of pain. When the pain threshold has been reached, the device will resume from its baseline (32 °C) with a rise of 0.5 °C/s. This procedure will be repeated three times. Pain threshold will be defined as the average of the three measurements. 30 minutes
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