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• Placebo Effect https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Alternative medicine - Placebo effect 1 Use of placebos in order to achieve a placebo effect in integrative medicine has been criticized as “diverting research time, money, and other resources from more fruitful lines of investigation in order to pursue a theory that has no basis in biology”. https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Alternative medicine - Placebo effect Another critic has argued that academic proponents of integrative medicine sometimes recommend misleading patients by using known placebo treatments in order to achieve a placebo effect. However, a 2010 survey of family physicians found that 56% of respondents said they had used a placebo in clinical practice as well. Eighty-five percent of respondents believed placebos can have both psychological and physical benefits. 1 https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo - Placebo effect and the brain 1 These changes can act upon the brain's early stages of information processing: Research using Event-related potential|evoked brain potentials upon painful laser pulses, for example, finds placebo effects upon the N2–P2, a biphasic negative–positive complex response, the N2 peak of which is at about 230 ms, and the P2 one at about 380 ms https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo - Placebo effect and the brain 1 The brain is also involved in less-studied ways upon nonanalgesic placebo effects: https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect 1 Placebo effect consists of several different effects woven together, and the methods of placebo administration may be as important as the administration itself. https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect 1 Placebo effects are subject of recent scientific research aiming to understand underlying neurobiological mechanisms of action in pain relief, immunosupression, Parkinson disease and Depression (mood)|depression.Neurobiological Mechanisms of the Placebo Effect, Fabrizio Benedetti, Helen S. Mayberg, Tor D. Wager, Christian S. Stohler, and Jon-Kar Zubieta, https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect 1 The Journal of Neuroscience, 9 November 2005, 25(45) [http://www.jneurosci.org/content/25/45/1039 0.full] Brain imaging techniques done by Emeran Mayer, Johanna Jarco and Matt Lieberman showed that placebo can have real, measurable effect on physiological changes in the brain.The neural correlates of placebo effects: a disruption account, Matthew D. Lieberman, Johanna M. Jarcho, Steve Berman, Bruce D. Naliboff, https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect Placebos are widely used in medical research and medicine, and the placebo effect is a pervasive phenomenon; in fact, it is part of the response to any active medical intervention. 1 https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect The placebo effect points to the importance of perception and Neural top down control of physiology|the brain's role in physical health 1 https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect 1 Most studies have attributed the difference from baseline until the end of the trial to a placebo effect, but the reviewers examined studies which had both placebo and untreated groups in order to distinguish the placebo effect from the natural progression of the disease. https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - History 1 John Haygarth was the first to investigate the efficacy of the placebo effect in the 18th-century https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - History Émile Coué, a France|French pharmacist, working as an apothecary at Troyes between 1882 and 1910, also discovered the potency of the Placebo Effect. He became known for reassuring his clients by praising each remedy's efficiency and leaving a small positive notice with each given medication. His book Self-Mastery Through Conscious Autosuggestion was published in England (1920) and in the United States (1922). 1 https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - History 1 Beginning in the 1960s, the placebo effect became widely recognized and placebo controlled trials became the norm in the approval of new medications. https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - Mechanism of the effect 1 A 2001 meta-analysis of clinical trials with placebo groups and no-treatment groups found no evidence for a placebo effect on objectively measured outcomes and possible small benefits in studies with continuous subjective outcomes (particularly pain). A 2004 follow-up analysis found similar results and increased evidence of bias in smaller trials that calls into question the apparent placebo effect on subjective outcomes. https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - Mechanism of the effect 1 Because the placebo response is simply the patient response that cannot be attributed to an investigational intervention, there are multiple possible components of a measured placebo effect https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - Brain and body 1 Recent reviews have argued the placebo effect is due to top-down control by the brain for immunity and pain https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - Brain and body 1 A recent fMRI study has shown that a placebo can reduce pain-related neural activity in the spinal cord, indicating that placebo effects can extend beyond the brain. https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - Clinical significance 1 Another group of researchers noted the dramatically different conclusions between these two sets of authors despite nearly identical meta-analytic results, and suggested that placebo effects are indeed significant but small in magnitude. https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - Clinical significance 1 Other writers have argued that the placebo effect can be reliably demonstrated under appropriate conditions. https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - Clinical significance Several clinical (physical placebos, patient-involved outcomes, falsely informing patients there was no placebo) and methodological (small sample size, explicit aim of studying the placebo effect) factors were associated with higher effects of placebo 1 https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - Clinical significance In 2013 Jeremy Howick et al. used Hróbjartsson Gøtzsche's data to compare the magnitude of placebo effects with the magnitude of treatment effects. They found a statistically significant difference between placebo and treatment effect sizes in trials with binary outcomes but not in trials with subjective outcomes. 1 https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - Doctor-patient relationship 1 * Roughly only 30% of the population seems susceptible to placebo effects, and it is not possible to determine ahead of time whether a placebo will work or not. (However the placebo effect is zero in studies of blood poisoning and up to 80% in studies of wound on the duodenum). https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - Genes 1 In social anxiety disorder (SAD) an inherited allele|variant of the gene for tryptophan hydroxylase 2 (enzyme that synthesizes the neurotransmitter serotonin) is linked to reduced amygdala activity and greater susceptibility to the placebo effect.[http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cg i/content/full/2008/1202/1 The Placebo Effect: Not All in Your Head], ScienceNOW Daily News, 2 December 2008[http://www.newscientist.com/article/ mg20026854.900-first-placebo-genediscovered.html?DCMP=OTCrssnsref=online-news First 'placebo gene' discovered], New https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Scientist, 03 December 2008 Placebo effect - Genes 1 In a 2012 study, variations on the COMT (catechol-O-methyltransferase) gene related to dopamine release are found to be critical in the placebo effect among the patients with irritable bowel syndrome participating in the trial, a research group in Harvard Medical School reported https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - Symptoms and conditions The placebo effect occurs more strongly in some conditions than others. Dylan Evans has suggested that placebos work most strongly upon conditions such as pain, swelling, stomach ulcers, depression, and anxiety that have been linked with activation of the Acute-phase reaction|acute-phase response. 1 https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - Pain 1 The placebo effect is believed to reduce pain in two different ways. One way is by the placebo initiating the release of endorphins, which are natural pain killers produced by the brain. The other way is the placebo changing the patient's perception of pain. A person might reinterpret a sharp pain as uncomfortable tingling.[http://www.cancer.org/treatm ent/treatmentsandsideeffects/treatment types/placebo-effect Placebo Effect]. Cancer.org. Retrieved on 2013-08-25. https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - Depression In 1998, a meta-analysis of published antidepressant trials found that 75% of the effectiveness of anti-depressant medication is due to the placebo effect and other non-specific effects, rather than the treatment itself.Kirsch, I 1 https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - Gastric and duodenal ulcers 1 Moreover, in many of these trials the gap between the active drugs and the placebo controls was not because [the trials' constituents] had high drug effectiveness, but because they had low placebo effectiveness. https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - List of medical conditions 1 The effect of placebo treatments (an inert pill unless otherwise noted) has been studied for the following medical conditions. Many of these citations concern research showing that active treatments are effective, but that placebo effects exist as well. https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - Placebo-controlled studies 1 The placebo effect makes it more difficult to evaluate new treatments. The placebo effect in such clinical trials is weaker than in normal therapy since the subjects are not sure whether the treatment they are receiving is active. https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - Placebo-controlled studies This is particularly likely, given that new therapies seem to have greater placebo effects 1 https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - Placebo-controlled studies 1 Clinical trials are often double-blinded so that the researchers also do not know which test subjects are receiving the active or placebo treatment. The placebo effect in such clinical trials is weaker than in normal therapy since the subjects are not sure whether the treatment they are receiving is active. https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect - Nocebo 1 The recipients of the inert substance may nullify the placebo effect intended by simply having a negative attitude towards the effectiveness of the substance prescribed, which often leads to a nocebo effect, which is not caused by the substance, but due to other factors, such as the patient's mentality towards his or her ability to get well, or even purely coincidental https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo in history - Placebo effect 1 The first to recognize and demonstrate the placebo effect was English physician John Haygarth in 1799 https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo in history - Placebo effect The wooden pointers were just as useful as the expensive metal ones, showing to a degree which has never been suspected, what powerful influence upon diseases is produced by mere imagination.Wootton, David. Bad medicine: Doctors doing harm since Hippocrates. Oxford University Press, 2006. While the word placebo had been used since 1772, this is the 1 https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo in history - Placebo effect In modern times the first to define and discuss the placebo effect was T.C Graves, in a published paper in The Lancet in 1920. He spoke of the placebo effects of drugs being manifested in those cases where a real psychotherapeutic effect appears to have been produced. 1 https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo in history - Placebo effect In 1946, the Yale biostatistician and physiologist E. Morton Jellinek described the placebo reaction or response. He probably used the terms placebo response and placebo reaction as interchangeable.Jellinek, E. M. Clinical Tests on Comparative Effectiveness of Analgesic Drugs, Biometrics Bulletin, Vol.2, No.5, (October 1946), pp. 87–91. Henry K. Beecher's 1955 paper The 1 https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo in history - Placebo effect It has been suggested that a distinction exists between the placebo effect (which applies to a group) and the placebo response (which is individual). 1 https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Alternative health - Placebo effect 1 Use of placebos in order to achieve a placebo effect in integrative medicine has been criticized as diverting research time, money, and other resources from more fruitful lines of investigation in order to pursue a theory that has no basis in biology. https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect (disambiguation) 1 * Placebo effect, the tendency of any medication or treatment, even an inert or ineffective one, to exhibit results simply because the recipient believes that it will work https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect (disambiguation) 1 * Placebo Effect (Doctor Who)|Placebo Effect (Doctor Who), an original novel written by Gary Russell and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Placebo effect (disambiguation) 1 * Placebo Effect, a song by English postpunk band Siouxsie and the Banshees on the 1979 album Join Hands https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html Henry K. Beecher - Beecher and the Placebo effect 1 His 1955 paper constantly and correctly speaks of placebo reactors and placebo non-reactors; furthermore, Beecher (1952), Beecher, Keats, Mosteller, and Lasagna (1953), Beecher (1959), consistently and correctly speak of placebo reactors and placebo nonreactors; they never speak of any placebo effect; and, finally, in his Research and the Individual: Human Studies (1970), Beecher simply speaks of placebos. https://store.theartofservice.com/the-placebo-effect-toolkit.html For More Information, Visit: • https://store.theartofservice.co m/the-placebo-effecttoolkit.html The Art of Service https://store.theartofservice.com