Revisiting the SSRI vs. placebo debate in the treatment of social anxiety disorder: the role of expectancy effects, neural responsivity, and monoamine transporters
Tomas Furmark, Kurt Wahlstedt, Vanda Faria

TL;DR
This paper explores how SSRIs and placebos affect social anxiety disorder, highlighting the role of brain activity, expectations, and serotonin.
Contribution
The paper reveals shared neural pathways between SSRIs and placebos and the impact of expectations on treatment outcomes.
Findings
Both SSRIs and placebos reduce amygdala activity and improve social anxiety symptoms equally.
Expectations significantly influence treatment outcomes, with overt SSRI treatment showing greater symptom reduction.
Combining SSRIs with CBT yields better and longer-lasting results than placebo with CBT.
Abstract
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), widely used for anxiety and depression, are often criticized for their perceived similarity in efficacy to placebo treatments and the unclear connection between brain serotonin levels, on one hand, and the symptomatology of these disorders, on the other. In this perspective paper we discuss the complex mechanisms behind SSRI and placebo treatments in managing social anxiety disorder (SAD), focusing on both pharmacological and expectancy effects. Through a series of neuroimaging studies using positron emission tomography (PET), we investigated the neural, neurochemical and behavioral changes associated with SSRI and placebo responses in SAD patients. Results from one study revealed that both SSRI and placebo responders showed equal reductions in amygdala activity, a region central to fear processing, as well as comparable improvements in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPain Management and Placebo Effect · Anxiety, Depression, Psychometrics, Treatment, Cognitive Processes · Treatment of Major Depression
