Positive Thinking a Pain Reliever
Positive thinking was as powerful as a shot of morphine for relieving pain and reduced activity in parts of the brain that process pain information.
The
Positive thinking
Dr Robert Coghill and his team studied 10 normal, healthy volunteers who had a heat simulator applied to their legs while their brains were being scanned using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).
The heat simulator was used to produce pain and fMRI was used to map brain activity. Before subjects underwent brain imaging, they learned to expect mild, moderate, or severe painful heat stimuli following different signals. None of the stimuli were hot enough to cause burns or damage the skin.
During brain imaging, a small percentage of the severe stimuli were incorrectly signaled as moderate stimuli to create expectations of decreased pain.
All 10 volunteers reported less pain when they expected lower levels of pain. These expectations reduced reports of pain by more than 28% - similar to an analgesic dose of the potent painkiller morphine.
At the same time, activity in areas of the brain important to both sensory and emotional processing of pain decreased. These areas included the primary somatosensory cortex, the insular cortex and the anterior cingulated cortex.
More than just pills
Dr Coghill explained: “Pain is not solely the result of signals coming from an injured body region.
“Pain needs to be treated with more than just pills. The brain can powerfully shape pain, and we need to exploit its power.”
He said the findings underscored the potential of cognitive therapy for the treatment of pain. Dr Ed Keogh, a psychologist and pain researcher from the
“This work is intriguing as it aims to identify specific brain regions linked to both the pain experience and expectations associated with pain.
“By empirically demonstrating such links, such research adds weight to the notion that how we think can effect what we feel. This is turn may have important implications for the way in which we prepare people for potentially painful events such as going to the dentist, childbirth or an operation.”
Dr Beverly Collette, president of the British Pain Society, said: “Most people who work in pain clinics use cognitive therapy to help people manage their pain better.
“This study goes some way to explaining the positive impact of these psychological techniques in chronic pain states. “
Popularity: 12% [?]
- Brain Imaging Studies Investigate Pain Reduction by Hypnosis
- Negative Thoughts Make You ill
- Think Away the Pain
- Hypnosis really changes your mind
- Mind over Medicine
- Hypnosis reduces cancer pain
- Hypnosis - not just a stage trick
- Researchers use brain scans on shoppers
- Forgetfulness is a tool of the brain
- Subliminal images impact on brain
This entry was posted on Thursday, February 1st, 2007 at 6:48 pm and is filed under mind power. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

