Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

This study aims to investigate the neurophysiological mechanisms of placebo perceived as caffeine during a motor task. Central and peripheral measures (i.e. electroencephalography and electromyography) will be assessed.


Clinical Trial Description

Classical randomized clinical trial (RCT) controlled by a placebo is considered as the gold-standard design when evaluating the efficacy of drugs and interventions, as a given treatment is scientifically sound only if it is superior to placebo. One of strongest threats to placebo is that a double-blinded RCT could not completely neutralize every human consciousness-distorted reality; behavioral aspects such as the belief on a given treatment may directly result in different placebo effects and produce different treatment placebo effect sizes. Any patient may create his/her own expectation on a situation having a chance of 50% placebo vs 50% treatment depending on the available information; beliefs may impact on working mechanism of pharmacological treatments, but also on placebos. One alternative emerged from debates by different scientific fields; the control for the participant's expectancy by using an active substance-perceived placebo. When compared to a traditional double-blinded placebo-controlled RCT design, the placebo-deceived design has the advantage of controlling expectation and anxiety biases in treatments having combined pharmacological and psychological effects, despite some obvious limitation. Mechanisms underpinning the ergogenic effect of placebos are unclear, but the suggestion is that the expectancy in using an ergogenic treatment/substance leads to psychobiological changes comparable to the actual treatment. A question that arises over RCT designs is how much effect on physical performance can be attributed to the actual substance and how much to the expectancy of receiving the actual substance. This question is relevant, as clinical and exercise settings have used double-blinded placebo-controlled RCT designs to investigate the ergogenic aids effects and mechanisms. However, participants may experience different placebo effect sizes in a double-blinded RCT design. This study will investigate ergogenic placebo effects and mechanisms elicited by double-blinded placebo-controlled RCT and deceived-placebo designs. This crossover study will investigate two different experimental designs. During the traditional double-blind RCT, participants will be informed that they will be randomly assigned to caffeine and placebo sessions, thereby having 50% placebo chances vs 50% caffeine chances. However, they will receive placebo capsules in both RCT sessions (non-informed substance/received placebo). In contrast, they will be precisely informed about their allocation (either caffeine or placebo trial) in the deceived-placebo design, however they will ingest placebo capsules in both sessions (informed caffeine/received placebo vs informed placebo/received placebo), thereby controlling caffeine pharmacological effects. A true caffeine trial (informed caffeine/received caffeine 6 mg·kg-1) will be performed as a positive control in the last session. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04317157
Study type Interventional
Source University of Sao Paulo
Contact Flavio O Pires, PhD
Phone +55+11+995335777
Email piresfo@usp.br
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date January 2022
Completion date August 2022

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT06038903 - The Turkish Version Of The Brief-Caffeine Expectancy Questionnaire
Completed NCT02900261 - Study on Sodium and Caffeine in Children and Adolescents
Completed NCT03850275 - The Effects of e+Shots Energy Beverage on Mental Energy N/A
Completed NCT01924481 - Effects of a Cocoa Shot on the Human Brain N/A
Completed NCT01330680 - Genetic Determinants of Cardiovascular Response to Coffee Drinking N/A
Completed NCT00184912 - The Effect of Caffeine on Ischemic Preconditioning N/A
Completed NCT03859882 - Protocol PERCAF 2018 N/A
Completed NCT02832401 - The Impact of Caffeine on Cognition in Schizophrenia N/A
Completed NCT04560595 - Remote Guided Caffeine Reduction N/A
Recruiting NCT05503732 - Effects of Energy Drinks on Sleep and Cardiovascular Health N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05521386 - The Effects of Caffeine on Heart Rate and Heart Rate Variability N/A
Completed NCT06039358 - Effects of Caffeine Ingestion on the Biomechanics of Healthy Young Subjects N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT04547868 - Can Coffee/Caffeine Improve Post-Operative Gastrointestinal Recovery N/A
Completed NCT05559372 - Energy Drink Effects on Performance, Mood, and Cardiovascular Outcomes N/A
Completed NCT01783561 - Early Versus Routine Caffeine Administration in Extremely Preterm Neonates Phase 4
Completed NCT04852315 - Acute Caffeine Ingestion on Futsal Performance N/A
Completed NCT05975489 - Genetics in the Effect of Caffeine on Fat Oxidation N/A
Recruiting NCT03298347 - Caffeine for Preterm Infants With Apnea of Prematurity(AOP) N/A
Completed NCT01435486 - Caffeine Citrate for the Treatment of Apnea Associated With Bronchiolitis in Young Infants N/A
Completed NCT04869176 - Effect of Caffeine on Heart Rate Variability in Newborns N/A