Increased heart rate functions as a signal of acute distress in non-communicating persons with intellectual disability

Abstract Intellectual disability (ID) affects approximately 1% of the population. Some patients with severe or profound ID are essentially non-communicating and therefore risk experiencing pain and distress without being able to notify their caregivers, which is a major health issue. This real-world...

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Main Authors: Emilie Kildal, Kristine Stadskleiv, Elin S. Boysen, Tone Øderud, Inger-Lise Dahl, Trine M. Seeberg, Svein Guldal, Frode Strisland, Cecilie Morland, Bjørnar Hassel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-03-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-86023-6
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spelling doaj-887dc6aaf51c4992bf4fe5484ee6c3322021-03-21T12:34:04ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-03-011111810.1038/s41598-021-86023-6Increased heart rate functions as a signal of acute distress in non-communicating persons with intellectual disabilityEmilie Kildal0Kristine Stadskleiv1Elin S. Boysen2Tone Øderud3Inger-Lise Dahl4Trine M. Seeberg5Svein Guldal6Frode Strisland7Cecilie Morland8Bjørnar Hassel9Department of Neurohabilitation, Oslo University HospitalDepartment of Clinical Neurosciences for Children, Oslo University HospitalSINTEF DigitalSINTEF DigitalOslo MunicipalitySINTEF DigitalNorwegian Farmers’ AssociationSINTEF DigitalDepartment of Behavioral Science, Oslo Metropolitan UniversityDepartment of Neurohabilitation, Oslo University HospitalAbstract Intellectual disability (ID) affects approximately 1% of the population. Some patients with severe or profound ID are essentially non-communicating and therefore risk experiencing pain and distress without being able to notify their caregivers, which is a major health issue. This real-world proof of concept study aimed to see if heart rate (HR) monitoring could reveal whether non-communicating persons with ID experience acute pain or distress in their daily lives. We monitored HR in 14 non-communicating participants with ID in their daily environment to see if specific situations were associated with increased HR. We defined increased HR as being > 1 standard deviation above the daily mean and lasting > 5 s. In 11 out of 14 participants, increased HR indicated pain or distress in situations that were not previously suspected to be stressful, e.g. passive stretching of spastic limbs or being transported in patient lifts. Increased HR suggesting joy was detected in three participants (during car rides, movies). In some situations that were previously suspected to be stressful, absence of HR increase suggested absence of pain or distress. We conclude that HR monitoring may identify acute pain and distress in non-communicating persons with ID, allowing for improved health care for this patient group.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-86023-6
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emilie Kildal
Kristine Stadskleiv
Elin S. Boysen
Tone Øderud
Inger-Lise Dahl
Trine M. Seeberg
Svein Guldal
Frode Strisland
Cecilie Morland
Bjørnar Hassel
spellingShingle Emilie Kildal
Kristine Stadskleiv
Elin S. Boysen
Tone Øderud
Inger-Lise Dahl
Trine M. Seeberg
Svein Guldal
Frode Strisland
Cecilie Morland
Bjørnar Hassel
Increased heart rate functions as a signal of acute distress in non-communicating persons with intellectual disability
Scientific Reports
author_facet Emilie Kildal
Kristine Stadskleiv
Elin S. Boysen
Tone Øderud
Inger-Lise Dahl
Trine M. Seeberg
Svein Guldal
Frode Strisland
Cecilie Morland
Bjørnar Hassel
author_sort Emilie Kildal
title Increased heart rate functions as a signal of acute distress in non-communicating persons with intellectual disability
title_short Increased heart rate functions as a signal of acute distress in non-communicating persons with intellectual disability
title_full Increased heart rate functions as a signal of acute distress in non-communicating persons with intellectual disability
title_fullStr Increased heart rate functions as a signal of acute distress in non-communicating persons with intellectual disability
title_full_unstemmed Increased heart rate functions as a signal of acute distress in non-communicating persons with intellectual disability
title_sort increased heart rate functions as a signal of acute distress in non-communicating persons with intellectual disability
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Abstract Intellectual disability (ID) affects approximately 1% of the population. Some patients with severe or profound ID are essentially non-communicating and therefore risk experiencing pain and distress without being able to notify their caregivers, which is a major health issue. This real-world proof of concept study aimed to see if heart rate (HR) monitoring could reveal whether non-communicating persons with ID experience acute pain or distress in their daily lives. We monitored HR in 14 non-communicating participants with ID in their daily environment to see if specific situations were associated with increased HR. We defined increased HR as being > 1 standard deviation above the daily mean and lasting > 5 s. In 11 out of 14 participants, increased HR indicated pain or distress in situations that were not previously suspected to be stressful, e.g. passive stretching of spastic limbs or being transported in patient lifts. Increased HR suggesting joy was detected in three participants (during car rides, movies). In some situations that were previously suspected to be stressful, absence of HR increase suggested absence of pain or distress. We conclude that HR monitoring may identify acute pain and distress in non-communicating persons with ID, allowing for improved health care for this patient group.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-86023-6
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