Placebo effects on nausea and motion sickness are resistant to experimentally-induced stress
Placebo effects on nausea and motion sickness are resistant to experimentally-induced stress
Nausea often occurs in stressful situations, such as chemotherapy or surgery. Clinically relevant placebo effects in nausea have been demonstrated, but it remains unclear whether stress has an impact on these effects. The aim of this experimental study was to investigate the interplay between acute stress and placebo effects in nausea. 80 healthy female volunteers susceptible to motion sickness were randomly assigned to either the Maastricht Acute Stress Test or a non-stress control condition, and to either placebo treatment or no treatment. Nausea was induced by a virtual vection drum and behavioral, psychophysiological as well as humoral parameters were repeatedly assessed. Manipulation checks confirmed increased cortisol levels and negative emotions in the stressed groups. In the non-stressed groups, the placebo intervention improved nausea, symptoms of motion sickness, and gastric myoelectrical activity (normo-to-tachy (NTT) ratio). In the stressed groups, the beneficial effects of the placebo intervention on nausea and motion sickness remained unchanged, whereas no improvement of the gastric NTT ratio was observed. Results suggest that placebo effects on symptoms of nausea and motion sickness are resistant to experimentally-induced stress. Stress most likely interfered with the validity of the gastric NTT ratio to measure nausea and thus the gastric placebo effect.
Jacob, Carmen
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Olliges, Elisabeth
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Haile, Anja
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Hoffmann, Verena
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Jacobi, Benjamin
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Steinkopf, Leander
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Lanz, Marina
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Wittmann, Marc
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Tschöp, Matthias H.
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Meissner, Karin
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19 June 2023
Jacob, Carmen
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Olliges, Elisabeth
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Haile, Anja
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Hoffmann, Verena
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Jacobi, Benjamin
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Steinkopf, Leander
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Lanz, Marina
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Wittmann, Marc
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Tschöp, Matthias H.
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Meissner, Karin
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Jacob, Carmen, Olliges, Elisabeth, Haile, Anja, Hoffmann, Verena, Jacobi, Benjamin, Steinkopf, Leander, Lanz, Marina, Wittmann, Marc, Tschöp, Matthias H. and Meissner, Karin
(2023)
Placebo effects on nausea and motion sickness are resistant to experimentally-induced stress.
Scientific Reports, 13, [9908].
(doi:10.1038/s41598-023-36296-w).
Abstract
Nausea often occurs in stressful situations, such as chemotherapy or surgery. Clinically relevant placebo effects in nausea have been demonstrated, but it remains unclear whether stress has an impact on these effects. The aim of this experimental study was to investigate the interplay between acute stress and placebo effects in nausea. 80 healthy female volunteers susceptible to motion sickness were randomly assigned to either the Maastricht Acute Stress Test or a non-stress control condition, and to either placebo treatment or no treatment. Nausea was induced by a virtual vection drum and behavioral, psychophysiological as well as humoral parameters were repeatedly assessed. Manipulation checks confirmed increased cortisol levels and negative emotions in the stressed groups. In the non-stressed groups, the placebo intervention improved nausea, symptoms of motion sickness, and gastric myoelectrical activity (normo-to-tachy (NTT) ratio). In the stressed groups, the beneficial effects of the placebo intervention on nausea and motion sickness remained unchanged, whereas no improvement of the gastric NTT ratio was observed. Results suggest that placebo effects on symptoms of nausea and motion sickness are resistant to experimentally-induced stress. Stress most likely interfered with the validity of the gastric NTT ratio to measure nausea and thus the gastric placebo effect.
Text
s41598-023-36296-w
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Accepted/In Press date: 31 May 2023
Published date: 19 June 2023
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Local EPrints ID: 505088
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505088
ISSN: 2045-2322
PURE UUID: d0852146-1649-4efe-925b-693dd1c718d7
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Date deposited: 25 Sep 2025 17:11
Last modified: 26 Sep 2025 02:16
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Author:
Elisabeth Olliges
Author:
Anja Haile
Author:
Verena Hoffmann
Author:
Benjamin Jacobi
Author:
Leander Steinkopf
Author:
Marina Lanz
Author:
Marc Wittmann
Author:
Matthias H. Tschöp
Author:
Karin Meissner
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