Effects of ginger and expectations on symptoms of nausea in a balanced placebo design

Ginger effects on (experimental) nausea have been described, but also strong placebo effects and sex differences when nausea is involved. The "balanced placebo design" has been proposed to allow better separation of drug and placebo effects. Sixty-four healthy participants (32 women) were...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2012-11, Vol.7 (11), p.e49031-e49031
Hauptverfasser: Weimer, Katja, Schulte, Jörg, Maichle, Annamaria, Muth, Eric R, Scisco, Jenna L, Horing, Björn, Enck, Paul, Klosterhalfen, Sibylle
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container_end_page e49031
container_issue 11
container_start_page e49031
container_title PloS one
container_volume 7
creator Weimer, Katja
Schulte, Jörg
Maichle, Annamaria
Muth, Eric R
Scisco, Jenna L
Horing, Björn
Enck, Paul
Klosterhalfen, Sibylle
description Ginger effects on (experimental) nausea have been described, but also strong placebo effects and sex differences when nausea is involved. The "balanced placebo design" has been proposed to allow better separation of drug and placebo effects. Sixty-four healthy participants (32 women) were randomly assigned to receive an antiemetic ginger preparation or placebo, and half of each group was told to have received drug or placebo. They were exposed to 5×2 min body rotations to induce nausea. Subjective symptoms and behavioral (rotation tolerance, head movements) and physiological measures (electrogastrogram, cortisol) were recorded. Groups were balanced for sex of participants and experimenters. Ginger and the information given did not affect any outcome measure, and previous sex differences could not be confirmed. Adding the experimenters revealed a significant four-factorial interaction on behavioral but not on subjective or physiological measures Men who received placebo responded to placebo information when provided by the male experimenter, and to ginger information when provided by the female experimenter. This effect was not significant in women. The effects of an antiemetic drug and provided information interact with psychosocial variables of participants and experimenters in reports of nausea.
doi_str_mv 10.1371/journal.pone.0049031
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subjects Adult
Analysis
Antiemetics - therapeutic use
Cortisol
Drug development
Female
Gastrointestinal agents
Gender aspects
Gender differences
Ginger
Glucocorticoids
Head movement
Head Movements
Humans
Male
Medical screening
Medicine
Motion sickness
Nausea
Nausea - drug therapy
Physiology
Placebo Effect
Rotation
Sex
Sex differences
Stomach - physiology
Time Factors
Young Adult
Zingiber officinale - chemistry
title Effects of ginger and expectations on symptoms of nausea in a balanced placebo design
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