4.5 Article

Conditioning cortisol in healthy young women - A randomized controlled trial

Journal

PSYCHONEUROENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 124, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2020.105081

Keywords

Learned placebo effects; Conditioning; Cortisol; Stress

Funding

  1. Radboud Institute for Health Sciences, Nijmegen, the Netherlands
  2. European Research Council [ERC-2013-CoG-617700_EXPECT HEAL-TH]

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The study suggests potential effects of conditioning on cortisol, but baseline group differences complicate the interpretation, making it impossible to draw clear conclusions. While the conditioned group showed a moderately smaller decrease in salivary cortisol, no significant differences were found in other outcome measures.
Background: Learned placebo effects induced by pharmacological conditioning affect immune and endocrine outcomes and may offer new possibilities for clinical applications. Whether or not cortisol is subject to this type of associative learning processes, and whether conditioning may affect responses to stress, is currently unclear. Method: A randomized placebo-controlled trial was conducted in 48 healthy young women. During acquisition, participants received a pill containing either 100 mg hydrocortisone (unconditioned stimulus) or placebo, paired with a gustatory conditioned stimulus on three consecutive days. During evocation, all participants received placebo paired with the conditioned stimulus, again on three consecutive days. During the third evocation trial, participants underwent a psychosocial stress task. The main outcome parameter salivary cortisol and secondary outcome parameters salivary alpha-amylase, self-reported positive affect and tension, heart rate, and skin conductance level were measured at several time points. Results: Significant baseline group differences on cortisol were found at several time points, which complicate the interpretation of group differences. During the first evocation session, the conditioned group showed a moderately smaller cumulative decrease in salivary cortisol from baseline than the placebo control group. No significant differences were found between the groups on cortisol during the second and third evocation or in response to stress, nor on other outcome measures. Conclusion: Although the results provide potential further indications for effects of conditioning on cortisol, baseline differences make it impossible to draw clear conclusions. No indications for possible effects of conditioning on the cortisol stress response or autonomous or affective responses to stress were found.

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