Unit Health, Medical and Neuropsychology, Leiden University, Leiden, the Netherlands.
Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition, Leiden University, Leiden, the Netherlands.
Pain. 2021 Jul 1;162(7):2024-2035. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000002199.
Expectancies can shape pain and other experiences. Generally, experiences change in the direction of what is expected (ie, assimilation effects), as seen with placebo effects. However, in case of large expectation-experience discrepancies, experiences might change away from what is expected (ie, contrast effects). Previous research has demonstrated contrast effects on various outcomes, but not pain. We investigated the effects of strong underpredictions of pain on experienced pain intensity. In addition, we assessed related outcomes including (certainty of) expectations, fear of pain, pain unpleasantness, autonomic responses, and trust. Healthy participants (study 1: n = 81 and study 2: n = 123) received verbal suggestions that subsequent heat stimuli would be moderately or highly painful (correct prediction), mildly painful (medium underprediction; study 2 only), or nonpainful (strong underprediction). Both studies showed that participants experienced less intense pain upon strong underprediction than upon correct prediction (ie, assimilation). Expected pain, fear of pain, and pain unpleasantness were generally also lowered. However, strong underprediction simultaneously lowered certainty of expectations and trust in the experimenter. Study 2 indicated that the effects of strong underprediction vs medium underprediction generally did not differ. Moreover, study 2 provided some indications for reduced heart rate and skin conductance levels but increased skin conductance responses upon strong underprediction. In conclusion, even strong underpredictions of pain can reduce pain (ie, cause assimilation), although not significantly more than medium underpredictions. However, strong underpredictions can cause uncertainty and undermine trust. These findings suggest that healthcare providers may wish to be cautious with providing overly positive information about painful medical procedures.
期望可以影响疼痛和其他体验。一般来说,体验会朝着预期的方向发生变化(即同化效应),就像安慰剂效应一样。然而,在期望与体验之间存在较大差异的情况下,体验可能会朝着与预期相反的方向发生变化(即对比效应)。之前的研究已经证明了各种结果存在对比效应,但尚未涉及疼痛。我们研究了强烈的疼痛预测不足对体验到的疼痛强度的影响。此外,我们还评估了相关的结果,包括(对)期望的确定性、对疼痛的恐惧、疼痛的不愉快感、自主反应和信任。健康参与者(研究 1:n = 81;研究 2:n = 123)接受了口头暗示,即随后的热刺激将是中度或高度疼痛(正确预测)、轻度疼痛(中度预测不足;仅在研究 2 中)或无痛(强烈预测不足)。两项研究均表明,与正确预测相比,参与者在强烈预测不足时体验到的疼痛强度较低(即同化)。预期的疼痛、对疼痛的恐惧和疼痛的不愉快感通常也会降低。然而,强烈的预测不足同时降低了对期望的确定性和对实验者的信任。研究 2 表明,强烈预测不足与中度预测不足的效果通常没有差异。此外,研究 2 表明,与强烈预测不足相比,心率和皮肤电导率水平可能会降低,但皮肤电反应会增加。总之,即使是强烈的疼痛预测不足也可以减轻疼痛(即引起同化),尽管效果并不明显强于中度预测不足。然而,强烈的预测不足可能会导致不确定性和破坏信任。这些发现表明,医疗保健提供者在提供有关疼痛医疗程序的过于积极的信息时可能需要谨慎。