4.5 Article

Placebo Effects in Traumatic Brain Injury

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA
Volume 35, Issue 11, Pages 1205-1212

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/neu.2017.5506

Keywords

dopamine; placebo effects; reward system; TBI; verbal suggestion

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In recent years, several randomized controlled trials evaluating pharmaceutical treatments for traumatic brain injury (TBI) have failed to demonstrate efficacy over placebo, with both active and placebo arms improving at comparable rates. These findings could be viewed in opposing ways, suggesting on the one hand failure of the tested outcome, but on the other, representing evidence of robust placebo effects in TBI. In this article, we examine several of the primary psychological processes driving placebo effects (verbal suggestion, cognitive re-framing, interpersonal interactions, conditioning, therapeutic alliance, anxiety reduction) as well as placebo neurobiology (top-down cortical regulation, reward system activation, dopaminergic and serotonergic neurotransmission). We then extrapolate from the literature to explore whether something inherent in TBI makes it particularly responsive to placebos. Viewed as such here, placebos may indeed represent a powerful and effective treatment for a variety of post-TBI complaints.

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