- ICH GCP
- US Clinical Trials Registry
- Clinical Trial NCT06986122
How Virtual Environments Affect Pain and Anxiety: A Study on Control and Memory
This research study explores how different virtual environments influence our experience of pain and anxiety, particularly focusing on the role of perceived control. Participants will navigate through three distinct virtual rooms, each with different levels of threat and controllability: one safe room (no pain), one where pain can be avoided by pressing a button (controllable threat), and one where pain occurs without the ability to stop it (uncontrollable threat). The study aims to understand how these contexts affect pain perception, anxiety levels, autonomic responses (like heart rate and skin conductance), and even memory for visual details in the environment.
For patients and caregivers, this research is particularly relevant because it sheds light on how our surroundings and sense of control can impact pain experiences - a crucial factor in managing chronic pain conditions or anxiety disorders. The findings could potentially lead to new therapeutic approaches that use virtual environments to help patients better cope with pain by creating contexts where they feel more in control.
The study involves multiple sessions where participants will:
- Learn to navigate virtual rooms and associate them with different pain contingencies
- Have their physiological responses measured while experiencing these environments
- Undergo brain imaging to understand the neural mechanisms involved
- Test how these learned associations persist or change over time
What makes this study particularly innovative is its combination of virtual reality with precise measurement of both subjective experiences (like pain reports) and objective physiological markers. For caregivers supporting loved ones with chronic pain or anxiety, this research highlights how environmental factors and perceived control might be leveraged to improve quality of life.
The potential implications of this research are significant. Understanding how context affects pain could lead to:
- Better virtual reality therapies for pain management
- Improved design of healthcare environments to reduce patient anxiety
- New approaches to enhance placebo effects in clinical settings
- Strategies to help patients feel more in control of their symptoms
For the broader field of pain research, this study represents an important step in bridging our understanding of psychological factors (like sense of control) with neurological processes. The focus on how these associations persist or change over time (through extinction and reversal phases) could be particularly valuable for developing longer-term interventions.
While the study specifically examines healthy volunteers, the principles being investigated - how environmental context and perceived control affect our experience of threat and pain - have direct relevance to clinical populations dealing with chronic pain, anxiety disorders, or conditions where placebo effects play an important role. The multi-method approach (combining behavioral, physiological, and brain imaging data) provides a comprehensive picture that could inform more holistic treatment approaches in the future.
This research is especially timely as virtual reality technologies become more accessible in healthcare settings. Understanding precisely how virtual environments can modulate pain and anxiety experiences could help optimize these emerging therapeutic tools. The study's findings may contribute to more personalized approaches to pain management, where treatments could be tailored based on an individual's specific responses to different environmental contexts and levels of perceived control.
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