Matt Banghart
@mattbanghart.bsky.social
85 followers 73 following 10 posts
Pharmacology and photons. In the brain. To study pain. Occasional patch clamping and cocktail crafting. www.banghartlab.org
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mattbanghart.bsky.social
Curious about the placebo effect, especially placebo pain relief? If so, check out our pre-print on placebo analgesia in mice bit.ly/3QlktPq, in which we ask how pain-modulatory neural circuits become activated in the brain to suppress pain in the absence of a drug. 1/9
Top-down control of the descending pain modulatory system drives placebo analgesia
In placebo analgesia, prior experience and expectations lead to pain suppression by the administration of an inert substance, but causal evidence for its neural basis is lacking. To identify the under...
bit.ly
Reposted by Matt Banghart
mattbanghart.bsky.social
Congratulations to the authors, especially Giulia Livrizzi, who conducted the vast majority of this work while a PhD student in the lab.
mattbanghart.bsky.social
Understanding the neural basis of placebo will help us develop better therapies for pain and depression. Capitalizing on placebo can reduce our reliance on dangerous drugs, whereas reducing placebo in clinical trials will help reveal the true efficacy of emerging therapies. 9/9
mattbanghart.bsky.social
Interestingly, conditioning appears to prime this circuit through a poorly understood process involving peptidergic plasticity. 8/9
mattbanghart.bsky.social
Our findings suggest that the vlPAG is a central node in a closed, negative feedback loop through which incoming noxious sensory information is shaped by endogenous opioids to match expectations based on prior experience. 7/9
mattbanghart.bsky.social
Using a genetically-encoded opioid sensor developed by @LinTianPhD bit.ly/4i2jHTf, we discovered that the painful test stimulus evokes opioid peptide release in the vlPAG within seconds, but this was only detected after morphine conditioning. 5/9
mattbanghart.bsky.social
Using Ca2+ recordings and LOF manipulations, we established an essential role for vlPAG neurons that project to the RVM in both morphine and placebo analgesia. In contrast, we found that cortical input to the vlPAG is only critical for placebo. 4/9
mattbanghart.bsky.social
Although we only conditioned the mice to suppress a paw withdrawal (antinociception), the placebo effect extended to unconditioned pain-related behaviors, such as avoidance and escape, indicating that the conditioning protocol produces a general state of analgesia. 3/9
mattbanghart.bsky.social
To achieve placebo analgesia in mice, we conditioned them with morphine. This yielded ~50% of the morphine effect on placebo trials! Like most placebo analgesia in humans, the placebo in mice relies on endogenous opioid neuropeptide signaling. 2/9
mattbanghart.bsky.social
Curious about the placebo effect, especially placebo pain relief? If so, check out our pre-print on placebo analgesia in mice bit.ly/3QlktPq, in which we ask how pain-modulatory neural circuits become activated in the brain to suppress pain in the absence of a drug. 1/9
Top-down control of the descending pain modulatory system drives placebo analgesia
In placebo analgesia, prior experience and expectations lead to pain suppression by the administration of an inert substance, but causal evidence for its neural basis is lacking. To identify the under...
bit.ly