• Pain · Jun 1997

    Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial

    Blockade of nocebo hyperalgesia by the cholecystokinin antagonist proglumide.

    • F Benedetti, M Amanzio, C Casadio, A Oliaro, and G Maggi.
    • Dipartimento di Neuroscienze, Università di Torino, Corso Raffaello, Italy.
    • Pain. 1997 Jun 1; 71 (2): 135-40.

    AbstractIn patients who reported mild postoperative pain, we evoked a nocebo response, a phenomenon equal but opposite to placebo. Patients who gave informed consent to increase their pain for 30 min received a substance known to be non-hyperalgesic (saline solution) and were told that it produced a pain increase. A nocebo effect was observed when saline was administered. However, if a dose of 0.5 or 5 mg of the cholecystokinin antagonist proglumide was added to the saline solution, the nocebo effect was abolished. A dose of 0.05 mg of proglumide was ineffective. The blockade of the nocebo hyperalgesic response was not reversed by 10 mg of naloxone. These results suggest that cholecystokinin mediates pain increase in the nocebo response and that proglumide blocks nocebo through mechanisms not involving opioids. Since the nocebo procedure represents an anxiogenic stimulus and previous studies showed a role for cholecystokinin in anxiety, we suggest that nocebo hyperalgesia may be due to a cholecystokinin-dependent increase of anxiety.

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