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The source of this article is the New Zealand Herald: http://tinyurl.com/chfon

Scientists suggest rationale for the placebo effect

30.01.06 1.00pm
By Steve Connor

Scientists may have discovered a possible cause of the mysterious placebo
effect whereby a sham medical treatment results in a genuine benefit to the
patient.

A study has found that production of a chemical "messenger" in the brain
appears to play a critical role in generating the placebo effect in
patients given fake treatments.

The findings could help to explain the many cases of "cures" resulting from
nothing more than a belief by patients that they have been given a
treatment that will help them to recover.

Doctors have treated many conditions using the placebo effect, from ridding
people of warts by painting them with brightly coloured but inert dye to
carrying out sham operations that have fooled patients into believing that
they have had real surgery.

Placebo - which means "I shall please" in Latin - has long been accepted as
a genuine phenomenon in medicine but no-one has been able to explain it
satisfactorily, other than by saying it demonstrates the power of the mind
over the body.

Clinical trials involving potent new drugs have to take account of the
placebo effect by monitoring a control group of patients given a dummy pill
made of sugar or starch, even thought scientifically the placebo effect
cannot be explained.

However, Jon Stoessl, professor of neurology at Canada's University of
British Columbia in Vancouver, believes that the placebo effect could be
caused by the production of a powerful chemical in the brain called
dopamine which is involved, among other things, in triggering the
expectation of pleasure and reward.

Professor Stoessl carried out a study on patients suffering from
Parkinson's disease, which is known to result from a lowering of normal
levels of dopamine in certain parts of the brain.

Normally, when Parkinson's patients are given a chemical precursor to
dopamine they show an improvement in levels of dopamine produced naturally
in the brain, which makes them feel better.

However, when Professor Stoessl injected six of his Parkinson's patients
with a simple saline solution he found that they, too, showed an
improvement in levels of dopamine: he measured the average increase to be
more than double.

The patients given the placebo of saline were all told that they were going
to be given the actual treatment and as a result they were expecting to
feel an improvement, Professor Stoessl said.

"We were of course lucky that we were looking at a disease where dopamine
plays a critical role," Dr Stoessl said.

"We think that the expectation of benefit is critical to the placebo effect
no matter what is wrong.

And then once the expectation is there the brain may activate other
machinery that may be more specific to the particular disease," he said.

Details of the experiment will be shown on BBC2's "Alternative Medicine:
the evidence" on Tuesday night presented by Professor Kathy Sykes of
Bristol University.

"Dopamine could be central to the placebo effect in all cases because of
its connection to expectation," Professor Sykes said.

"We all release dopamine when we expect something good, whether it's food,
sex, a drink or maybe a medical treatment.

And that means that the placebo mechanism that seems to work in Parkinson's
may trigger the placebo effect in all of us," she said.

The BBC television programme follows patients who have undergone sham
operations on their knee only to find that their symptoms improve as if
they have had genuine surgery.

"What I'm most concerned about is that the placebo effect is much more
powerful than we give it credit for," Professor Sykes said.

"We don't train our medical students to understand that if they give their
patients the expectation that a treatment will work, it will help them to
recover," she said.

- INDEPENDENT

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