1 / 15

Power of Endorphin by Placebo effect

Power of Endorphin by Placebo effect. Group 3. HOPE vs. EPOH group. HOPE group: 74% of patients responded to the drugs. EPOH group: only 22% of patients responded to the same drugs.

cyndi
Télécharger la présentation

Power of Endorphin by Placebo effect

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Power of Endorphin by Placebo effect Group 3.

  2. HOPE vs. EPOH group HOPE group: 74% of patients responded to the drugs. EPOH group: only 22% of patients responded to the same drugs.  ONLY difference between HOPE and EPOH group was the title of the drugs.

  3. Mesmerism • Wakeful state of focused beliefHeightened relaxation andsuggestibility, connecting each other through magnetic fluid.  In the movie, with the Mesmer’s therapeutic method, patients actually experienced easing pain and decreasing symptoms.

  4. Placebo effect HOPE vs. EPOH case Mesmer's therapeutic method can be almost explained by ‘placebo effect’.

  5. Placebo effect Placebo means it is a substance with no specific therapeutic activity. Placebo effect occurs when a patient's symptoms are altered in some way by a treatment, due to the individual psychological expectation suggestion from an authority figure believingthat it will work. .

  6. Placebo effect Placebo means ‘I will please him’ , which indicates a belief that the effect was due to a subconscious desire of the patient to please the doctor. • Placebo effect is in the patient, not the doctor

  7. Nocebo effects • Due to the subject's pessimistic belief and expectation that the inert drug would produce harmful results. (even though these responses had not been chemically generated.)

  8. Steps of placebo effect Trusting the doctor ExpectationBelief Pain Anxiety Symptoms would be decreased Biologicalprocess

  9. Biological process • Endorphin • chemical compounds that occur naturally in the brain and have similar pain-relieving properties to morphine, thought to be involved in the control of emotional responses.

  10. Physiological aspect (PAG) Injection of placebo Secretion of endogenous opioid Activation of opiate receptors Reduction of pain Psychological aspect Morphine injected : 70% Placebo injected : 35% Placebo effect in pain control Injection of Naloxone (opiate antagonist)

  11. Biological process • The study conducted at the University of Michigan provided the first direct evidence that the brain’s own pain-relieving chemicals, endorphins play a role in the placebo effect.

  12. Biological process placebo

  13. In summary Expectation and belief by patient him/herself (HOPE group, Mesmer’s method, Placebo effect) Raising biological process (Secretion of Endorphin, etc) Symptom, pain are eased

More Related