Forum für Wissenschaft, Industrie und Wirtschaft

Hauptsponsoren:     Siemens  n-tv 
Datenbankrecherche:

Fachgebiet (optional):

 

People are more suggestible under laughing gas

09.01.2009
The pain-relieving effects of nitrous oxide – laughing gas – may be enhanced by suggestion or hypnosis, according to a new study by UCL (University College London). The study’s findings – that people are more suggestible under the gas – mean that dental patients may benefit from being coached to relax while undergoing sedation.

Anzeige

Nitrous oxide (laughing gas) is commonly used by dentists to sedate their patients before treatment, but some dentists believe their patients also become more suggestible while under the influence of the gas. A number of dentists have been trained in hypnosis and find that their patients respond well to being spoken to in a quiet, hypnotic manner – the new findings suggest that these effects could be further enhanced with laughing gas.


The UCL study set out to establish whether laughing gas does indeed boost imaginative suggestibility – a trait closely related to hypnotic suggestibility - and imagery vividness. Thirty participants took part in two sessions where they were given a mask from which they breathed in air or 25 per cent nitrous oxide. The volunteers were not told which type of gas they were being given, and the mask was scented to disguise the sweet smell of the laughing gas.

During each session, participants were given a series of mental imagery tests and were asked to rate their response according to a scale of 1-7, where 1 was ‘as clear and vivid as the real thing’ and 7 was ‘no image present at all’. For example, participants were asked to close their eyes and imagine tasting oranges or smelling roast beef, feeling linen or hearing the honk of a car horn.

Volunteers were also put through a series of ‘imaginative suggestibility’ tests based on suggestions given to them while under the gas. The suggestions were worded to invite the participant to experience hallucinated sensations. For example, they were told to imagine a sour taste in their mouth, and were told that after a while they would actually begin to experience a sour taste in their mouth, and that this would become stronger and stronger. Or they were told that a voice would come out of a (non-existent) speaker in the corner of the room, and that the voice would ask them a number of simple questions about themselves. If the participant responded well to the suggestion, he/she would answer some of the questions that the hallucinated voice had asked.

The study, published online in the journal Psychopharmacology, found that the nitrous oxide boosted imaginative suggestibility by approximately 10 per cent. This effect was unrelated to participants’ expectations regarding the effects of the drug.

Dr Matthew Whalley, Honorary Research Fellow at UCL, says: “Nitrous oxide is one of the most widely used yet least well understood anaesthetic gases and until recently, relatively little was known about how it worked inside the body. Recent research has shown that nitrous oxide, like ketamine, acts as an antagonist at glutamatergic N-methyld-aspartate (NMDA) receptors which are found throughout the brain. A brain-wide excitation of these receptors might be responsible for the laughing gas-induced increase in imagery vividness found in the study. Alternatively, the gas may have caused volunteers to partly withdraw from their reality of actively taking part in the tests, so that they felt less in control of their actions and felt that the suggested effects were happening by themselves.

“Many dentists use laughing gas to relieve discomfort in their patients, but our study suggests that combining the gas with instructions and suggestions to help them to relax and become absorbed in imagery, for example, might enhance the pain-relieving effect. Our findings are preliminary, however, so it would be helpful to do a larger scale study to confirm our results and explore the best ways in which to use and combine nitrous oxide and suggestion.

“Our study fixed the concentration of nitrous oxide at a relatively low 25 per cent, so it would be good to explore whether there is a dose-response relationship between drug administration and suggestibility. We already know that hypnosis enhances the effects of suggestion, so it would be helpful for clinicians to know whether combining laughing gas with hypnosis would increase suggestibility and enhance the analgesic (pain-killing) effects.

“A growing number of health professionals are trained in hypnosis but it is nothing to be alarmed about – people often think that hypnosis is about the hypnotist ‘taking control’ of the hypnotised person, but in reality the person undergoing hypnosis is an active participant and has to want to participate in order to experience a benefit. There is good evidence that although people can respond to suggestions under hypnosis, they can also choose to refuse any suggestion, and cannot be made to do things that they do not want to do.”

Emeritus Professor David Oakley, UCL Psychology, says: “It is estimated that between 250 and 500 dentists who have been trained in hypnosis in the UK are currently using hypnosis and suggestion to help their patients to deal with anxiety, discomfort and pain. This study provides further evidence that combining hypnotic suggestion with established procedures can be an effective way of making the experience of dentistry a more positive one for patients.”

Jenny Gimpel | Quelle: alphagalileo
Weitere Informationen: www.ucl.ac.uk/media/library/laughinggas

Weitere Nachrichten aus der Kategorie Medizin Gesundheit:

nachricht First-of-its-kind Head Patch Monitors Brain Blood Flow and Oxygen
02.02.2012 | Mayo Clinic

nachricht Schwergewichtiger Risikofaktor für Krebs
02.02.2012 | Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum

Alle Nachrichten aus der Kategorie Medizin Gesundheit >>>

Die aktuellsten Pressemeldungen zum Suchbegriff Innovation >>>


Die letzten 5 Focus-News des innovations-reports im Überblick:

Im Focus: Gelbe Biotechnologie: Insekten-Gene im Hochdurchsatz mithilfe von Futterpflanzen erforschen


Durch Verwendung viraler Vektoren können mittels RNAi Genfunktionen in Insekten innerhalb kurzer Zeit studiert werden

Gelbe Biotechnologie ist die Biotechnologie mit Insekten, analog zur grünen (Pflanze) und roten (Tiere) Biotechnologie. Wirkstoffe oder Gene aus Insekten werden charakterisiert und können für die Forschung oder die Anwendung in Landwirtschaft oder Medizin eingesetzt werden.

Wissenschaftler des Max-Planck-Instituts für chemische Ökologie, Jena, verwenden jetzt ein Verfahren, mit dem sie die ...

Im Focus: Eine Quantenverbindung zwischen Licht und Mechanik


Optomechanische Interaktionen

Vom Schweizerischen Nationalfonds (SNF) unterstützte Forschende stellen ein mikroskopisches System vor, das Licht in mechanische Schwingung und umgekehrt umwandeln kann. Diese Interaktion ist so stark, dass damit die Bewegung des Oszillators auf einer quantenmechanischen Ebene beeinflussbar wird.

Seit Anfang des 20. Jahrhunderts ist bekannt, dass die Bewegung von Gegenständen letztlich ...

Im Focus: Kraftstoff aus Marktabfällen


Matschige Tomaten, braune Bananen und überreife Kirschen – die Abfälle von Großmärkten sind bisher bestenfalls auf dem Kompost gelandet. Künftig sollen sie besser genutzt werden: In einer neu entwickelten Anlage lassen sie sich vergären. Dabei entsteht Methan, das als Kraftstoff Autos antreiben kann.

Lässt der Autofahrer am Zapfhahn Erdgas in den Tank strömen statt Benzin oder Diesel, fährt er günstiger und umweltbewusster: Der Treibstoff schont das Portemonnaie, die Auspuffgase enthalten weniger Kohlenstoffdioxid und kaum Rußpartikel. Zunehmend rüsten Autofahrer daher ihre Otto-Motoren für den Erdgas-Betrieb um. Erdgas gehört jedoch ebenso wie Erdöl zu den ...

Im Focus: Wie Plastik durch fremde Moleküle leitfähig wird


Mechanismen bei der Dotierung organischer Halbleiter geklärt

Das Dotieren anorganischer Halbleiter stellt die zentrale Grundlage der modernen Elektronik dar. Dabei werden Halbleitermaterialien, wie beispielsweise Silizium, kontrolliert mit Fremdatomen verunreinigt, wodurch sich die Leitfähigkeit präzise einstellen lässt.

Seit einigen Jahren wird die sogenannte organische Elektronik als zukunftsweisende Technologie entwickelt. Hier werden organische Moleküle und Polymere als Halbleiter verwendet.
...

Im Focus: Roboter erkundet neues Terrain


Sie reinigen, inspizieren und suchen nach Katastrophenopfern – mobile Roboter sind vielseitig einsetzbar.

Doch oft ist keine Karte verfügbar, die ihnen den Weg durch unbekanntes Gelände weist. Ein neuer mobiler Roboter erkundet autonom fremde Umgebungen und kartiert sie. Eine Algorithmen-Toolbox macht’s möglich.

Industrieroboter sind seit Jahren in der Arbeitswelt etabliert – etwa in der Automobil- oder der Hausgerätefertigung verrichten sie zuverlässig ihren Dienst am ...

Alle Focus-News des innovations-reports >>>

Anzeige

B2B Suche
Produkt / Dienstleistung
Firma / Organisation

Anzeige

IHR
JOB & KARRIERE
SERVICE
im innovations-report
in Kooperation mit academics
Aktuell

Wissenschaftler entdecken möglicherweise bewohnbare Super-Erde

02.02.2012 | Physik Astronomie

Study finds southern Indian Ocean humpbacks singing different tunes

02.02.2012 | Studien Analysen

Forscher in Heidelberg untersuchen intrazellulären Transport

02.02.2012 | Biowissenschaften Chemie

VideoLinks
B2B-VideoLinks
Weitere VideoLinks >>>
Veranstaltungen

E-Book-Day am 21. April 2012

02.02.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten

Das Kleinkraftwerk im eigenen Keller

02.02.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten

1. Augsburger Technologietransfer-Kongress

02.02.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten

FindAndHelp