Hypnotherapy and
Hypnosis articles
Under the knife...under hypnosis
From issue 2511 of New Scientist magazine, 06 August 2005, page
34.
As the surgeon's knife cut into her chest, 46-year-old Pippa Plaisted
should have been in agony. The 45-minute breast cancer operation
she was undergoing at the Lister Hospital in London would normally
have needed a general anaesthetic. But Plaisted had not been anaesthetised,
nor given painkilling drugs of any sort. Instead, hypnotherapist
Charles Montigue stood at the operating table, his thumb resting
on Plaisted's forehead, monitoring the hypnotic trance he had
put her in minutes before the operation began. Eyes closed but
awake, Plaisted could hear the surgeon calmly telling her, at
each stage of the operation, what was going to happen next. Plaisted
had already used hypnotherapy to help overcome her fear of operations
but had
never tried it during surgery. It seemed a daring thing to do,
but she was desperate
to avoid conventional anaesthetics. She had had a series of operations,
and after each one the drugs had left her feeling dizzy for months.
Astonishingly, the hypnosis succeeded in making her operation
entirely pain-free. "The surgeon was cutting and sewing inside
me, but I could not feel any sensation at all," Plaisted recalls.
"After the operation I felt tired, but there was no nausea or
wooziness. I had a clear head and felt totally normal."

Medical hypnotherapist Stephen Chan MIAPH demonstrates hypnosis
for pain control and the power of hypno-anaesthesia at the
21st Annual IAPH Conference, May 2006
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"Astonishingly,
the hypnosis succeeded in making her operation entirely
pain-free."
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For most people the idea of undergoing major
surgery while conscious seems unthinkable, but Plaisted's use
of hypnosis is no one-off. In Liege Hospital, Belgium, anaesthetists
routinely use a procedure that they call "hypnosedation".
They have found that when combined with local anaesthetic and
much-reduced amounts of other analgesic drugs, medical hypnosis
is an effective alternative to general anaesthesia. So far, the
Liege team have used this technique in over 4800 major and minor
operations. Now other hospital departments are beginning to follow
suit. Given the advances in pharmacological anaesthetics in recent
years, it seems odd that anaesthetists should even think of using
hypnosis.
During the 19th century, hypnosis was reportedly used as an anaesthetic
in several hundred operations. However, with the discovery of
chemical anaesthetics such as nitrous oxide and chloroform, the
practice fell into disuse. Still many anaesthetists harboured
nagging doubts about the wisdom of putting people into a pharmacological
coma. One of them was Marie-Elisabeth Faymonville, who now leads
the Liege team. She noticed that patients often reported difficulty
recovering, and when she had an operation under a general, she
felt that her cognition and memory were affected. She started
looking for an alternative and in 1992 began testing hypnosedation.
Faymonville's team still uses general anaesthesia when absolutely
necessary, such as in stomach, chest or orthopaedic surgery where
it is impossible to numb all the nerves with a local. She remains
unconvinced, though, of the safety of general anaesthesia. "As
anaesthesiologists, we are only really beginning to ask ourselves
if it is really as harmless as we say it is," she says. "We know
nothing about the long-term repercussions of these drugs on the
brain." "The surgeon was cutting and sewing inside me, but I could
not feel any sensation at all"
So far, studies into the long-term effects of general anaesthesia
have been carried out mostly in animals or cell culture, making
it difficult to draw firm conclusions about the effects on human
health. "There are really only threads of evidence at this time,"
says anaesthetist Steffen Meiler of the Medical College of Georgia
in Augusta. "We have a vast clinical record of the overall safety
of general anaesthesia.
But we have these intriguing strands of evidence." Several studies,
for example, have shown that people who have had general anaesthetic
are more likely to develop neurodegenerative diseases such as
Alzheimer's and Parkinson's later in life.
Last year, Roderic Eckenhoff of the University of Pennsylvania
in Philadelphia investigated whether the inhaled volatile anaesthetics,
which make up the majority of the estimated 100 million general
anaesthetics given worldwide each year, might be behind this association.
He found that in cultured neurons even brief exposure to the anaesthetics
halothane and isoflurane was enough to cause abnormal clumping
of proteins.
"The acceptance of hypnosis in surgery is very
high...far higher than you would expect..."
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Eckenhoff suggests this mechanism could accelerate the development
of neurodegenerative diseases (Anaesthesiology, vol 101, p 703).
Other potentially harmful effects relate to the way anaesthetics
interact with the immune system. "An increasing body of evidence
strongly suggests that volatile anaesthetics suppress adaptive
immunity, an effect that can last for many days after surgery,"
Meiler says. Several studies have suggested that inhalable anaesthetics
are capable of inducing programmed cell death in white blood cells.
Meiler believes these findings certainly merit larger, clinical
studies.
"We are a long way away from saying that volatile anaesthetics
are bad for people," he says. "But we cannot ignore these data."
David Hatch, professional standards adviser at the Royal College
of Anaesthetists in London, admits that too little is known about
both the short and long-term health effects of anaesthetics. He
says that although the overall risk of dying from general anaesthesia
is about 1 in 200,000, the risk is higher for certain groups such
as smokers and people with heart conditions or diabetes.
"I think most anaesthetists recognise that there is a place for
complementary therapies - increasingly so," he says. "I think
hypnosis has a very valuable part to play. Most anaesthetists
would not be opposed, and obviously hypnosis is very safe. The
less drugs you can use, the better." Comfortably numb General
anaesthetics are often used simply because the patient would prefer
to be unconscious during the operation. Anaesthesiologist Lee
Fleisher of the University of Pennsylvania estimates that about
a third of operations done under general anaesthesia could actually
be done under local.
Meanwhile, the Liege team are discovering that hypnosedation has
some remarkable benefits. For a start, patients bleed less. This
makes surgery easier to perform, particularly nose or breast operations,
where incisions often lead to copious bleeding. One reason for
this reduced bleeding, Faymonville says, is that anaesthetic drugs
inhibit the natural tendency for blood vessels to constrict in
reaction to an incision. Patients under general anaesthesia also
have to be ventilated with a respirator. "This creates a positive
pressure in the chest, which increases bleeding," Faymonville
says. "In hypnosedation patients breathe spontaneously."
Because hypnotised patients are conscious throughout the operation
they can even cooperate with the surgeon. Dirk Hermes, an oral
and maxillofacial surgeon at University Hospital Lübeck in Germany,
is taking advantage of this. He often performs a surgical procedure
to correct eyelids that are drooping due to old age or facial
trauma. This sight-saving operation is tricky. The adjustment
has to be perfect: too little and the patient cannot close their
eyes properly; too much and the eyes cannot be fully opened.
This is where it is helpful to have conscious patients. "It is
a big, big benefit," says Hermes. Hypnosedation also seems to
improve recovery time. In 2000, Faymonville's team compared 20
patients undergoing thyroid surgery under hypnosedation with 20
patients undergoing the same surgery under general anaesthesia.
Whereas the anaesthetised patients spent an average of 36 days
recovering from the operation, those that had been hypnosedated
returned to work after an average of only 10 days. The main difference,
the team found, was a reduced level of inflammation in the hypnosedated
group (Annales de Chirurgie, vol 125, p 539).
Hypnotherapists recognise four stages of hypnotic trance: hypnoid,
light, medium and deep. For most operations, hypnoid or light
trance are ideal, says Hermes. In these states the patient is
relaxed, has little inclination to speak or move, and has a slower
heartbeat and breathing rate. Deeper states take longer to induce
and make the patient too distanced to be able to co-operate. However,
in cases like Plaisted's where not even local anaesthetic is used,
the patient needs to be in a medium or deep trance to blot out
the pain.
To get patients into trance, Hermes first asks them to close their
eyes and think of a situation where they feel secure and happy.
"Most patients choose a holiday or a day at the beach," he says.
Gradually slowing down his voice, Hermes gets patients to describe
the sights, sounds, feel, smells and tastes of their imagined
scenario, and then he repeats back to them what they have said.
After several minutes of this, over 96 per cent of patients are
able to arrive at a hypnoid or light trance. Hermes has found
that even when patients feel pain, it can be perceived benignly.
He once performed major facial surgery on a patient who requested
the smallest possible dose of local anaesthetic.
When the operation was over, Hermes asked the patient whether
he had felt any discomfort. "I didn't really have pain," the patient
replied. "It was just that I lay in the sun too long and I got
a terrible sunburn." Neuroscientists are only just beginning to
understand how hypnosis can reduce sensations of pain. In November,
researchers at the University of Iowa in Iowa City published a
study that used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to
compare the brain activity of hypnotised and non-hypnotised volunteers
when they were exposed to painful heat. The fMRI images showed
that brain activity in the two groups differed significantly.
The response of their subcortical neural network, where pain signals
start, was unaffected. However, there were remarkable differences
in the higher parts of the pain network. Activity in the primary
sensory cortex, the area responsible for feeling pain, was dampened
down.
Meanwhile, there was increased activity in the anterior cingulate
cortex and basal ganglia. Sebastian Shulz-Stubner, who led the
study, believes that this increased activity in the anterior cingulate
cortex and basal ganglia may be suppressing activity in the primary
sensory cortex (Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine, vol 29,
p 549). Another fMRI experiment has shown that the hypnotised
mind is consciously able to manipulate pain perception. In a study
to be published later this year, a team led by Stuart Derbyshire
of the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania hypnotised patients
with fibromyalgia, a rheumatic condition that causes chronic pain
in the extremities. Then he asked the patients to imagine a dial
representing their pain. When they turned this imaginary dial
down, the patient reported feeling less pain, and fMRI images
confirmed that there was less activity in the brain areas responsible
for pain.
"There was a direct correlation between the subjective pain and
the amount of activity in those pain areas," says team member
David Oakley of University College London. Whatever the mechanisms
behind it, could hypnosis realistically replace a significant
number of the 100 million general anaesthetics given worldwide
each year? Sceptics point out that only a small proportion of
people are easily hypnotised, making it largely impractical. According
to David Rogerson, an anaesthetist and hypnotherapist at Derby
City General Hospital in the UK, only 10 per cent of people are
highly susceptible to hypnosis.
"The hypnotic
state is a normal state that everyone
can access if they want to..."
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"Those are the kind of people that a stage
hypnotist will pick out of the audience," he says. The other 90
per cent, Rogerson says, will not be able to become sufficiently
hypnotised to withstand the pain of surgery. Not so, says Shulz-Stubner.
He reckons that in an operating theatre, as many as 80 per cent
of people can achieve the right level of hypnosis. Faymonville's
results tell an even bigger success story: hypnosis has been successful
in all but six of her patients. "The hypnotic state is a normal
state that everyone can access if they want to," Faymonville says.
Another potential barrier to practicality is the amount of practice
patients need before an operation. Many practitioners feel that
dry runs are essential: Shulz-Stubner says that the minimum requirement
is a practice session the night before. But Hatch points out that
if pre-hypnosis is necessary, it would put a strain on hospital
workloads and in many cases make it unfeasibly expensive.
Again, however, Faymonville's experience suggests otherwise. Her
team does not perform dry runs. They explain the technique to
their patients a couple of weeks before surgery, but only hypnosedate
them for the first time 10 minutes before surgery. And in any
case, as both Faymonville and Hermes have found, the extra time
required to explain or administer hypnosis is more than made up
by faster recovery periods.
Casualties who need surgery to close their wounds often have to
be treated under local anaesthetic as they have eaten too recently
to have a general, which can only be done on an empty stomach.
"If the patient is very stressed and frightened, then I do hypnosis,"
says Hermes. But isn't it very difficult to hypnotise someone
who is in that state? "Not at all," Hermes says.
"The more stressed people are, the more thankful they are if you
help them to relax and calm down." Yet for all the apparent benefits,
the medical establishment is still not taking hypnosis seriously.
"It is sad that our medical colleagues still manage to ignore
this, because it really helps a lot of patients," says Hermes.
"Surgeons say that there are not enough valid clinical studies.
Unfortunately, most studies are published in journals that an
ordinary surgeon would not read." Hermes himself has had difficulty
getting reports published in widely read surgical journals, and
his previous boss was opposed to him introducing "funfair methods"
into the hospital. Patients, however, are much more open to the
idea.
"The acceptance of hypnosis in surgery is very high - far higher
than you would expect," says Hermes. "To the public, hypnosis
still has a very bad image. If you ask people in the street they
will say it is something for TV shows. But I just tell my patients,
'Hypnosis is something serious and medical, it doesn't have anything
to do with TV shows, and it works'."