Effect of early procedural pain experience on subsequent pain responses among premature infants

Background and objectives: Preterm newborns are exposed to repeated procedural pain during their NICU stay. Acute pain has negative short-term effects and may have adverse neurodevelopmental sequelae. Disagreement among researchers exists in the direction of pain responses. We aimed at evaluating th...

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Main Authors: Atef El-Sayed Donia, Omar Atef Tolba
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2016-06-01
Series:Egyptian Pediatric Association Gazette
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S111066381630009X
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spelling doaj-eacd7eed8c78445cbf50c270adfa002c2020-11-25T02:44:57ZengSpringerOpenEgyptian Pediatric Association Gazette1110-66382016-06-01642748010.1016/j.epag.2016.03.002Effect of early procedural pain experience on subsequent pain responses among premature infantsAtef El-Sayed Donia0Omar Atef Tolba1Department of Pediatrics, Al-Azhar University, EgyptCairo University Children’s Hospital, Department of Pediatrics, Cairo University, EgyptBackground and objectives: Preterm newborns are exposed to repeated procedural pain during their NICU stay. Acute pain has negative short-term effects and may have adverse neurodevelopmental sequelae. Disagreement among researchers exists in the direction of pain responses. We aimed at evaluating the short-term effects of early procedural pain exposure on subsequent behavioral and physiological responses among preterm infants; and to define possible contributing factors. Patients and methods: A prospective study included 203 preterm newborns recruited from 2 community centers, excluding cases having conditions that may affect pain responses. They were categorized into: group I including cases who were exposed to painful procedures; and group II were not exposed. Pain response to heel-stick procedure was assessed by Neonatal Infant Pain Scale to measure behavioral response, and changes in heart rate and oxygen saturation to evaluate physiological responses. Results: History of pain exposure and number of procedures were the only independent variables that predicted subsequent pain responses while other contextual factors had no significant impact. The behavioral pain responses were blunted in group I with lower pain scores during and after the heel-stick test, while physiological responses were exaggerated with a higher heart rate and oxygen saturation variability. Conclusion: On studying the physiological and behavioral responses to pain in the premature infants, it was found that prior pain exposure and the number of procedures predict dampened behavioral and exaggerated physiologic subsequent pain responses. Protocols for minimization of pain exposure and pain control need to be implemented to avoid infant distress and long-term neurodevelopmental sequelae.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S111066381630009XPreterm neonatesPainBehavioral responsePhysiological responses
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Atef El-Sayed Donia
Omar Atef Tolba
spellingShingle Atef El-Sayed Donia
Omar Atef Tolba
Effect of early procedural pain experience on subsequent pain responses among premature infants
Egyptian Pediatric Association Gazette
Preterm neonates
Pain
Behavioral response
Physiological responses
author_facet Atef El-Sayed Donia
Omar Atef Tolba
author_sort Atef El-Sayed Donia
title Effect of early procedural pain experience on subsequent pain responses among premature infants
title_short Effect of early procedural pain experience on subsequent pain responses among premature infants
title_full Effect of early procedural pain experience on subsequent pain responses among premature infants
title_fullStr Effect of early procedural pain experience on subsequent pain responses among premature infants
title_full_unstemmed Effect of early procedural pain experience on subsequent pain responses among premature infants
title_sort effect of early procedural pain experience on subsequent pain responses among premature infants
publisher SpringerOpen
series Egyptian Pediatric Association Gazette
issn 1110-6638
publishDate 2016-06-01
description Background and objectives: Preterm newborns are exposed to repeated procedural pain during their NICU stay. Acute pain has negative short-term effects and may have adverse neurodevelopmental sequelae. Disagreement among researchers exists in the direction of pain responses. We aimed at evaluating the short-term effects of early procedural pain exposure on subsequent behavioral and physiological responses among preterm infants; and to define possible contributing factors. Patients and methods: A prospective study included 203 preterm newborns recruited from 2 community centers, excluding cases having conditions that may affect pain responses. They were categorized into: group I including cases who were exposed to painful procedures; and group II were not exposed. Pain response to heel-stick procedure was assessed by Neonatal Infant Pain Scale to measure behavioral response, and changes in heart rate and oxygen saturation to evaluate physiological responses. Results: History of pain exposure and number of procedures were the only independent variables that predicted subsequent pain responses while other contextual factors had no significant impact. The behavioral pain responses were blunted in group I with lower pain scores during and after the heel-stick test, while physiological responses were exaggerated with a higher heart rate and oxygen saturation variability. Conclusion: On studying the physiological and behavioral responses to pain in the premature infants, it was found that prior pain exposure and the number of procedures predict dampened behavioral and exaggerated physiologic subsequent pain responses. Protocols for minimization of pain exposure and pain control need to be implemented to avoid infant distress and long-term neurodevelopmental sequelae.
topic Preterm neonates
Pain
Behavioral response
Physiological responses
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S111066381630009X
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