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JOURNAL
OF
SPORTS SCIENCE &
MEDICINE
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Research
article
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IDENTIFICATION OF PLACEBO RESPONSIVE PARTICIPANTS IN 40KM LABORATORY CYCLING PERFORMANCE |
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Christopher J. Beedie |
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Canterbury Christ Church University, Canterbury, UK |
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© Journal of Sports Science and Medicine (2008) 7, 166 - 175 Search Google Scholar for Citing Articles |
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| ABSTRACT | |||||||||||||
| The placebo effect, a positive outcome resulting from the belief
that a beneficial treatment has been received, is widely acknowledged but
little understood. It has been suggested that placebo responsiveness, the
degree to which an individual will respond to a placebo, might vary in the
population. The study aimed to identify placebo-responsive participants
from a previously published paper that examined the effects of caffeine
and placebos on cycling performance. A quantitative model of placebo responsiveness
was defined. 14 male participants were subsequently classified as either
placebo responsive or non-responsive. Interviews were conducted to corroborate
these classifications. Secondary quantitative analyses of performance data
were conducted to identify further placebo responses. Finally, the five
factor model of personality was used to explore relationships between personality
and placebo responsiveness. Overall, 5 of 14 participants were classified
as placebo responsive. Performance data suggested that 2 participants were
placebo responsive whilst 12 were not. Interview data corroborated experimental
data for these participants and for 9 of the remainder, however it suggested
that the remaining 3 had experienced placebo effects. Secondary quantitative
analysis revealed that performance for these 3 participants, whilst no better
than for non-responsive participants, was associated with substantially
increased oxygen uptake in the 2 conditions in which participants believed
caffeine had been administered (7.0% ± 15.1; 95% confidence intervals -2.6
to 16.7, and 6.0% ± 15.4; -3.9 to 15.9 respectively). Finally, data suggested
that the personality factors of extroversion, agreeableness, openness and
neuroticism may relate to placebo responding. Placebo effects such as pain
tolerance and fatigue resistance might be experienced by a percentage of
participants but might not always be manifest in objective measures of performance.
Key words: Caffeine; personality; placebo effect; nocebo effect; qualitative. |
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| METHODS | |||||||||||||
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Participants Ethical
considerations Stage
1 With
reference to point 1, the direction of any placebo effects was assumed
to be positive. This assumption was based on the intuitive likelihood
that participants would want to experience enhanced performance, and would
expect to experience such enhancement on the basis of their general knowledge
of the ergogenic effects of caffeine. Participants' beliefs and expectations
were also reinforced via provision of literature attesting to the ergogenic
efficacy of caffeine and discussion of anecdotal evidence of caffeine
use amongst elite cyclists. Thus, given the purported linear relationship
between desire, beliefs, and expectations, and a positive placebo response
(Fillmore and Vogel-Sprott, 1995;
Kirsch and Weixel, 1988;
Marlatt and Rohsenow, 1980),
the direction of any observed placebo effects was assumed to be positive. Stage
2 Procedure Analysis Stage
3 Analysis Stage
4 Procedure Analyses |
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| RESULTS | |||||||||||||
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Stage
1 Corroboratory
evidence: non placebo-responders Non-corroboratory
evidence: Subjective placebo responders Stage
3 |
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| DISCUSSION | |||||||||||||
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Quantitative
and qualitative data suggest that, in the experimental study conducted
by Foad et al., 2008,
five of fourteen participants experienced a placebo effect resulting from
the belief that caffeine had been ingested. This rate of placebo responding
is consistent with previous data from sport (Beedie et al., 2007)
and elsewhere (Beecher, 1955).
Data also suggest that what appears to be the same qualitative response
experienced by all five placebo responders, that is, increased motivation,
pain tolerance and fatigue resilience, resulted in substantially increased
power output for two participants but decreased physiological efficiency
for the remaining three, the latter producing similar power output to
placebo non-responsive participants but at a substantially greater physiological
cost. It is in fact not unreasonable to suggest that the increased physiological
cost observed in subjective placebo responders constitutes a negative
placebo, or nocebo, effect (that is, a negative outcome driven by a false
belief). However, an alternative interpretation might be that these participants,
despite being able to use more oxygen in conditions in which they believed
that they had ingested caffeine, simply reached a mechanical or physiological
ceiling. A further possibility is that the increases in oxygen uptake
and blood lactate observed were the result of placebo-induced increases
in arousal, mimicking those which would be anticipated to result from
the ingestion of caffeine. This arousal could have been independent of,
and consequently in addition to, the physiological arousal associated
with cycling performance. |
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS | |
| No funding sources to declare. Publication of the above manuscript does not constitute endorsement by ACSM. |
| AUTHORS BIOGRAPHY | |
Chris BEEDIE Employment: Senior lecturer, Department of Sport Science, Tourism and Leisure, Canterbury Christ Church University, UK. Degree: PhD. Research interests: Placebo effects in sports performance, Mood and emotion in sport. E-mail: chris.beedie@canterbury.ac.uk |
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Abigail FOAD Employment: Research Fellow, Department of Sport Science, Tourism and Leisure, Canterbury Christ Church University, UK. Degree: PhD. Research interests: Placebo effects in sports performance, Cycling performance. E-mail: abby.foad@canterbury.ac.uk |
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Damian COLEMAN Employment: Senior lecturer, Department of Sport Science, Tourism and Leisure, Canterbury Christ Church University, UK. Degree: PhD. Research interests: Cycling physiology, Assessment of competitive cyclists. E-mail: damain.coleman@canterbury.ac.uk |