The effects of treatment failure generalize across different routes of drug administration
Published 2017 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
The effects of treatment failure generalize across different routes of drug administration
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
Science Translational Medicine
Volume 9, Issue 393, Pages eaal2999
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Online
2017-08-18
DOI
10.1126/scitranslmed.aal2999
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- The neuroscience of placebo effects: connecting context, learning and health
- (2015) Tor D. Wager et al. NATURE REVIEWS NEUROSCIENCE
- Placebo Effects in Medicine
- (2015) Ted J. Kaptchuk et al. NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE
- Predictors of the placebo analgesia response in randomized controlled trials of chronic pain
- (2015) Lene Vase et al. PAIN
- Systematic review of enriched enrolment, randomised withdrawal trial designs in chronic pain
- (2015) R. Andrew Moore et al. PAIN
- Antidepressant treatment history and drug-placebo separation in a placebo-controlled trial in major depressive disorder
- (2015) Aimee M. Hunter et al. PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
- Not seeing or feeling is still believing: conscious and non-conscious pain modulation after direct and observational learning
- (2015) Natalia Egorova et al. Scientific Reports
- A Neural Mechanism for Nonconscious Activation of Conditioned Placebo and Nocebo Responses
- (2014) Karin B. Jensen et al. CEREBRAL CORTEX
- Antidepressant treatment history as a predictor of response to scopolamine: clinical implications
- (2014) Jessica S. Ellis et al. JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS
- Expectations and positive emotional feelings accompany reductions in ongoing and evoked neuropathic pain following placebo interventions
- (2014) Gitte L. Petersen et al. PAIN
- The Effect of Treatment History on Therapeutic Outcome: Psychological and Neurobiological Underpinnings
- (2014) Simon Kessner et al. PLoS One
- The placebo response in medicine: minimize, maximize or personalize?
- (2013) Paul Enck et al. NATURE REVIEWS DRUG DISCOVERY
- The Effect of Treatment History on Therapeutic Outcome: An Experimental Approach
- (2013) Simon Kessner et al. JAMA Internal Medicine
- Nonconscious activation of placebo and nocebo pain responses
- (2012) K. B. Jensen et al. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- Utilizing placebo mechanisms for dose reduction in pharmacotherapy
- (2012) Bettina K. Doering et al. TRENDS IN PHARMACOLOGICAL SCIENCES
- On the importance of placebo timing in rTMS studies for pain relief
- (2011) Nathalie André-Obadia et al. PAIN
- Learned placebo analgesia in sequential trials: What are the Pros and Cons?
- (2011) Luana Colloca PAIN
- The Effect of Treatment Expectation on Drug Efficacy: Imaging the Analgesic Benefit of the Opioid Remifentanil
- (2011) U. Bingel et al. Science Translational Medicine
- Prediction, cognition and the brain
- (2010) Bubic Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
- Impact of Antidepressant Treatment History on Clinical Outcomes in Placebo and Medication Treatment of Major Depression
- (2010) Aimee M. Hunter et al. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
- Biological, clinical, and ethical advances of placebo effects
- (2010) Damien G Finniss et al. LANCET
- Two-stage enriched enrolment pain trials: A brief review of designs and opportunities for broader application
- (2009) Steve N. Quessy PAIN
- Power and sample size calculations for current status survival analysis
- (2009) John M. Williamson et al. STATISTICS IN MEDICINE
- Confidence in beliefs about pain predicts expectancy effects on pain perception and anticipatory processing in right anterior insula
- (2008) Christopher A. Brown et al. PAIN
Discover Peeref hubs
Discuss science. Find collaborators. Network.
Join a conversationAsk a Question. Answer a Question.
Quickly pose questions to the entire community. Debate answers and get clarity on the most important issues facing researchers.
Get Started