Distinguishing acupuncture from placebo acupuncture has been a methodological challenge. We propose to move this question into a well-controlled mechanistic laboratory model using a quantitative brain imaging method (fMRI) to investigate the neurobiological mechanism of acupuncture analgesia, placebo analgesia and their interrelationship. A well tested method to induce high expectation and low expectation will be combined with acupuncture analgesia and sham acupuncture analgesia to create a 2 X 2 neuroimaging comparison of verum (real) acupuncture and sham acupuncture each paired with positive and negative expectancies. To delineate the different brain networks involved, we will compare pre- and post-treatment fMRI signal changes induced by application of calibrated noxious stimuli (pain sensory encoding) and a subsequent rating task (pain intensity evaluation) after the different treatments. We hypothesize that modulation of the pain intensity evaluation process is a critical substrate of placebo analgesia. Specifically, we hypothesize that expectancy (placebo) analgesia, which critically depends on former knowledge, belief or experience, will be initialized by activity in the central nervous system. We propose that the activity in this network of brain regions will produce analgesia by activating descending endogenous opioid systems as well as by activating what we have called the """"""""selective pain intensity evaluation distortion process"""""""". The first mechanism may also be shared with acupuncture analgesia, however, the second mechanism should be unique for placebo analgesia in our study population who have no prior experience or expectancy for acupuncture analgesia. This proposal is directly relevant to a recent Program Announcement (PA-03-125) that calls for """"""""biobehavioral pain research"""""""". This proposal is also relevant to a recent RFA (AT-02-002) that calls for """"""""An Integrative Approach to Elucidation of the Underlying Mechanisms of Placebo Effect"""""""". It is also relevant to FY 2003 Research Priorities that call for """"""""preclinical neurobiological studies of the mechanisms underlying CAM approaches to the management of acute or chronic pain"""""""".

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Center for Complementary & Alternative Medicine (NCCAM)
Type
Exploratory/Developmental Grants (R21)
Project #
1R21AT001922-01A1
Application #
6825846
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZAT1-DB (13))
Program Officer
Pearson, Nancy
Project Start
2004-09-15
Project End
2006-07-31
Budget Start
2004-09-15
Budget End
2005-07-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2004
Total Cost
$218,541
Indirect Cost
Name
Massachusetts General Hospital
Department
Type
DUNS #
073130411
City
Boston
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
02199
Kirsch, Irving; Kong, Jian; Sadler, Pamela et al. (2014) Expectancy and Conditioning in Placebo Analgesia: Separate or Connected Processes? Psychol Conscious (Wash D C) 1:51-59
Kong, Jian; Loggia, Marco L; Zyloney, Carolyn et al. (2010) Exploring the brain in pain: activations, deactivations and their relation. Pain 148:257-67
Kong, Jian; Kaptchuk, Ted J; Polich, Ginger et al. (2009) Expectancy and treatment interactions: a dissociation between acupuncture analgesia and expectancy evoked placebo analgesia. Neuroimage 45:940-9
Kong, Jian; Kaptchuk, Ted J; Polich, Ginger et al. (2009) An fMRI study on the interaction and dissociation between expectation of pain relief and acupuncture treatment. Neuroimage 47:1066-76
Kong, Jian; Kaptchuk, Ted J; Webb, Julia Megan et al. (2009) Functional neuroanatomical investigation of vision-related acupuncture point specificity--a multisession fMRI study. Hum Brain Mapp 30:38-46
Kong, Jian; Gollub, Randy L; Polich, Ginger et al. (2008) A functional magnetic resonance imaging study on the neural mechanisms of hyperalgesic nocebo effect. J Neurosci 28:13354-62
Dougherty, Darin D; Kong, Jian; Webb, Megan et al. (2008) A combined [11C]diprenorphine PET study and fMRI study of acupuncture analgesia. Behav Brain Res 193:63-8
Kong, Jian; Gollub, Randy L; Webb, J Megan et al. (2007) Test-retest study of fMRI signal change evoked by electroacupuncture stimulation. Neuroimage 34:1171-81