[帕金森病的安慰剂效应]。

No to shinkei = Brain and nerve Pub Date : 2007-02-01
Hideto Miwa
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引用次数: 0

摘要

“安慰剂”在拉丁语中是“我将取悦”的意思。安慰剂效应已被随机对照药物研究广泛证实。抗帕金森药物的临床试验已经证明了安慰剂的有效性。安慰剂效应不仅可以在药物试验中观察到,也可以在深部脑刺激中观察到。最近关于帕金森病(PD)安慰剂效应的研究进展表明,安慰剂可以从本质上改善PD的运动症状。最近一项使用雷氯pride的正电子发射断层扫描(PET)的研究表明,在安慰剂反应的PD患者中,背纹状体释放内源性多巴胺。这表明,安慰剂诱导的临床改善预期可能激活纹状体中的内源性多巴胺,因此,安慰剂的有效性是通过补充内源性多巴胺来实现的。事实上,在植入深部脑刺激电极的手术中记录到的丘脑下核(STN)神经元活动的下降与安慰剂诱导的PD患者临床改善密切相关。虽然安慰剂效应的具体病理生理机制尚不清楚,但理论上,安慰剂效应通常由两种不同的机制来解释:一种是条件反射理论(巴甫洛夫条件反射),另一种是认知理论(临床改善预期)。虽然这两种机制都可能导致安慰剂效应,但PD中的安慰剂效应可能更多地归因于认知机制,如预期改善,因为安慰剂效应可以在新发PD患者中获得。越来越多的研究结果表明,多巴胺与临床改善(奖励)预期之间存在功能关系。需要进一步的基础研究来阐明多巴胺和奖励系统之间的复杂联系,但这些发现将有助于更好地理解PD中安慰剂效应的病理生理机制。
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[Placebo effect in Parkinson's disease].

"Placebo" is Latin for "I shall please". The placebo effect has been widely documented by randomized placebo-controlled drug studies. One of the best examples of placebo effectiveness is that have been shown in clinical trials of anti-parkinsonian drugs. The placebo effect is observable not only in drug trials but also with deep brain stimulation. Recent advances in research on the placebo effect in Parkinson's disease (PD) have suggested that motor symptoms of PD can be essentially improved by placebo. A recent study using positron emission tomography (PET) with raclopride demonstrated that release of endogeneous dopamine in the dorsal striatum occurs in placebo-responsive patients with PD. This suggests that placebo-induced expectation of clinical improvement may activate endogenous dopamine in the striatum, and that placebo effectiveness is thus achieved by endogenous dopamine supplementation. Indeed, decreased neuronal activities in the subthalamic nucleus (STN), that were recorded during surgery to implant deep brain stimulation electrodes, correlated well with placebo-induced clinical improvement in patients with PD. Although the detailed pathophysiological mechanism underlying the placebo effects remains uncertain, theoretically, the placebo effect has generally been explained by two different mechanisms: one is conditioning theory (pavlovian conditioning), and the other is cognitive theory (expectation of clinical improvement). Although both mechanisms may contribute to placebo effects, the placebo effect in PD may be attributed more to cognitive mechanisms such as expectation of improvement, because the placebo effect can be obtained in de novo PD patients. There have been accumulating findings that suggest a functional relationship between dopamine and the expectation of clinical improvement (reward). Further basic studies are required to clarify the complex link between dopamine and the reward system, but such findings will contribute to a better understanding of the pathophysiological mechanism underlying the placebo effect in PD.

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