Title: Pain in Newborns Compassion
1Pain in Newborns -- Compassion Common Sense
Yeah, Baby!
2Neonatal pain
- Suzanne S. Toce, MD
- Professor of Pediatrics
- Saint Louis University
- Medical Director, FOOTPRINTS
Gary Allegretta, M.D. Medical Director The Jason
Program Web www.jasonprogram.org
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3Outline
- Fundamental principles of neonatal pain
- Measuring neonatal pain
- Developmental aspects of pain
- Pharmacologic treatment of pain
- Non-pharmacologic treatment of pain
4State of the Art
Prevention and Management of Pain and Stress in
the Neonate (RE9945) --AMERICAN ACADEMY OF
PEDIATRICS Committee on Fetus and
NewbornCommittee on DrugsSection on
AnesthesiologySection on Surgery -- Pediatrics
Volume 105, Number 2 February 2000, pp 454-461
5Studies indicate a lack of awareness among health
care professionals of pain perception,
assessment, and management in neonates.9-11 When
analgesics were used in infants, they often were
administered based only on the perceptions of
health care professionals or family members. Fear
of adverse reactions and toxic effects often
contributed to the inadequate use of analgesics.
In addition, health care professionals often
focused on treatment of pain rather than a
systematic approach to reduce or prevent
pain.12,13 More recent surveys have demonstrated
increased awareness among health care
professionals of pain in neonates and infants and
its assessment and management.14-16 Several
textbooks on pain in neonates and infants have
been published,17-19 and measures for assessing
pain have been developed and validated.20-24
However, despite the advances in pain assessment
and management, prevention and treatment of
unnecessary pain attributable to anticipated
noxious stimuli remain limited.25-27 Several
important concepts must be recognized to provide
adequate pain management for the preterm and term
neonate
6Fundamental Concepts
- Babies feel pain despite established myths.
- Severity of pain and effects of analgesia can be
assessed in the neonate.20-24,42-46 - Neuroanatomical components and neuroendocrine
systems are sufficiently developed to allow
transmission of painful stimuli in the
neonate.28-32 - Exposure to prolonged or severe pain may
increase neonatal morbidity.33-36 - Infants who have experienced pain during the
neonatal period respond differently to
subsequent painful events.37-41 - Neonates are not easily comforted when
analgesia is needed.8 - So, lets fix that.
7Newborns dont feel pain
Newborns cant react to pain
Newborns cant remember pain
Dispelling the myths
8Neonatal Pain Scales
- Validated and Reliable Scales Exist
- The Perception Problem - Do we measure pain?
- Measure Physiologic Parameters
- Heart rate, resp rate, BP, O2 sats,
sweating,vagal tone, plasma cortisol catechols - Measure Behavioral Parameters
- Facial expressions, body movements, crying
- Examples
9The Perception Problem
Green Red Yellow
Green
Red
Yellow
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11Premature Infant Pain Profile
- Facial Actions
- Brow bulge
- Eye squeeze
- Nasolabial furrow
- Physiological Indicators
- Heart rate
- Oxygen saturation
- Context
- Gestational age
- Behavioral state
- Inter-rater reliability .93
12PIPP Scale
13CRIES scoring
- Crying
- Requirement for oxygen (to keep SaO2 95)
- Increased heart rate and BP
- Expression
- Sleeplessness
- Inter-rater reliability .72
14CRIES Scale
15Common SenseBabies Feel Pain
I.M.H.O.
16Developmental Aspects of Pain Perception
- Pain Pathways Reminder
- Anatomic Development
- Physiologic Development
17 Pain Pathways
Descending pathways Ascending pathways Periphera
l receptors Neural pathways Spinal cord
tracts Brainstem, thalamus, beyond
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19Anatomic developments
- Dendritic arborization 21 weeks PCA
- Nerve tracts in spinal cord 22 weeks
PCA - and brainstem
- Connections with 22 weeks PCA
- thalamocortical fibers
20Physiologic Development
- Lower pain threshold in neonatal rats
- Neurotransmitter receptors are up-regulated in
the neonatal period - Neonatal pain processing Early development of
the excitatory mechanisms later development of
inhibition - Normal development of the pain system occurs in
the absence of noxious stimuli
21Effect of GA on HR Response (tested at of life)
Stimulus
Change in HR ( SE) BPM
Porter, et al. Pediatrics, 1999
22Effect of GA on HR Response (tested at 36 weeks
of life)
Stimulus
Change in HR ( SE) BPM
Porter, et al. Pediatrics, 1999
23Prolonged Effects of Pain
- Alvares, D., et.al. Modeling the Prolonged
Effects of Neonatal Pain Progress in Brain
Research, Vol. 129, Ch. 27, 2000 - Previous Work
- Preterm infants show prolonged hyperalgesia
within an area of local tissue damage and
secondary hyperalgesia in the contralateral limb. - Circumcision results in increased pain behavior 3
months later. - Birth trauma linked to increased acute stress
responses to pain in infancy.
24This Study
Normal Mouse Nerve
25The Problem
Repair Response to Wound
26First, an Attitude
- Reasons Cited for Not Providing Analgesia During
Circumcision - Concern over risks (54)
- Not warranted (44)
- Lack of familiarity with techniques (18)
- Increased time (9)
- Pain is inflicted during anesthesia
- Anesthesia is inadequate/ineffective
- Pediatrics 1998
27Official AAP Policy
28Nonpharmacologic treatment of neonatal pain
How sweet for those faring badly to forget
their misfortunes for even a short time.
--- Sophocles
29Avoid Painful Procedures
- Painful or stressful procedures should be
minimized and, when appropriate, coordinated with
other aspects of the neonates care. Furthermore,
consideration of the least painful method is
important. For example, when performed by trained
personnel, obtaining blood by venipuncture may be
less painful than heel lancing.56-58 Skillful
placement of peripheral, central, or arterial
lines reduces the need for repeated intravenous
punctures or intramuscular injections. Thus, in
some such cases, the risk-benefit balance may
favor the more invasive indwelling catheters.
Whenever possible, validated noninvasive
monitoring techniques (e.g., pulse oximetry) that
are not tissue damaging should replace invasive
methods.
30Endogenous analgesic pathways
- Generalized tactile
- Orotactile
- Orogustatory
31Tactile Swaddling
- Swaddled weighing
- Less physiologic distress p
- More effective self-regulatory ability p
- Downside males cant do this
32Tactile skin-skin contact
Contact
Percent of time
Control
Grimace Cry
Gray, et al Pediatrics 2000
33Orotactile pathways
34Non-nutritive sucking
- Tested during heelstick procedure
- Heelstick caused no effect on respiratory rate
and oxygen saturations - Sucking reduced time of crying and heart rate
increases - --Corbo, et al. Biol Neonate, 2000
35Orogustatory
36Effect of Oral Sucrose Solution on Venipuncture
Pain
Abad, et al Acta Paediatr, 1996
Time crying (sec)
37Effect of sucrose and procedure on circumcision
pain
AJOG 2002186564-8
38Effect of solution and route on heelstick pain
NG sucrose Oral sucrose NG water Oral water
Percent time crying (Median)
Ramenghi, et al ADC (Fetal Neonatal Ed), 1999
39Pacifier and Sucrose in Procedural Pain
Median pain scale score
Carbajal, et al. BMJ, 1999
40Glucose for Analgesia
Crossover Trial of Analgesic Efficacy of Glucose
and Pacifier in Very Preterm Neonates During
Subcutaneous Injections --- Ricardo Carbajal, MD,
et.al. PEDIATRICS Vol. 110 No. 2 August 2002
- 40 very preterm neonates receiving
erythropoietin injections SQ - Primary outcome measure Douleur Aigue
Nouveau-ne scale (0-10) - Conclusions. A small dose of 0.3 ml of 30 oral
glucose has an analgesic effect in very preterm
neonates during subcutaneous injections. This
effect is clinically evident because it can be
detected by a behavioral pain rating scale. The
synergetic analgesic effect of glucose plus
sucking a pacifier is less obvious in very
preterm infants.
Details
41Fig 1. Individual pain evaluations with DAN
scale. Overall, glucose gives lower scores than
sterile water (p 0.03) however, 8 infants did
not show a reduction of pain scores. Solid black
lines indicate infants who did have a reduction
in pain. Red lines indicate infants who did not
have a reduction in pain scores with 30 glucose
as compared to sterile water.
42Sugar for analgesia
- Dose
- 0.12-.48 grams sucrose
- Drug
- Sucrose most effective
- 2ml of 24 solution
- Dispensing
- oral only
43Breastfeeding is Analgesic in Healthy Newborns
-- Gray, et.al, Pediatrics Vol. 109,
No. 4, April 2002
- The purpose of this study was to unite the
different components of nursing (taste, suckling,
and skin-to-skin contact), which have been shown
to be individually analgesic, by allowing
newborns to suckle their nursing mothers before,
during, and after a standard heel lance procedure
for blood collection. - The efficacy of this intervention was determined
by evaluating video recordings of infant crying
and facial expressions and by assessing blockade
of heart rate increases that normally accompany
the blood collection procedure. - Method
- 30 healthy, term, breast-fed infants _at_ Boston
Medical Center Hospital - Randomized to breast-fed and control
- Heel lance performed while swaddled, with and
without nursing - Measured crying, grimace, heart rate
44Results - Crying Grimace
45Results - Heart Rate
46Pharmacologic Treatment
- Pharmacological analgesia should be chosen
carefully based on comprehensive assessment of
the neonate, efficacy and safety of the drug, the
clinical setting, and experience of the personnel
using the drug. Drug doses, including those for
local anesthetics, should be calculated carefully
based on the current or most appropriate weight
of the neonate, and initial doses should not
exceed maximal recommended amounts. Subsequent
doses should be modified based on multiple
factors, including the cause of the pain,
previous response, clinical condition,
concomitant drug use, and the known
pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of the
sedative and analgesic drugs administered.
Medications that might result in the loss of
protective reflexes or cause cardiorespiratory
instability should be used only by appropriately
trained persons in an environment equipped to
handle emergencies.
47Continued
Studies are lacking on the management of pain in
neonatal conditions associated with extensive
tissue damage and those resulting in recurrent or
chronic pain (e.g., necrotizing enterocolitis,
meningitis, fractured bones). The effects of the
use of analgesics or sedation during the neonatal
period on long-term neurodevelopmental and
psychological outcomes has not been well
studied.49 No differences in intelligence, motor
function, or behavior at 5 to 6 years of age were
found between neonates who received morphine for
sedation during mechanical ventilation and
placebo-treated neonates.62
48A Simple Guideline
49Potential Adverse Effects of Supportive
Medications
50Recommendations
- Pain in newborns is unrecognized and
under-treated. Prescribe analgesia when indicated
during their medical care. - If a procedure is painful in adults, it should be
considered painful in newborns, even if they are
preterm. Newborns may experience a greater
sensitivity to pain and are more susceptible to
the long term effects of painful stimulation. - Treatment of pain may be associated with
decreased clinical complications and decreased
mortality. - Arch Ped Adoles Med Feb 2001
51Recommendations
- The appropriate use of environmental ,behavioral,
and pharmacologic Interventions can prevent,
reduce or eliminate neonatal pain in many
clinical situations. - Sedation does not provide pain relief and may
mask the neonates response to pain. - Health care professionals have the responsibility
for assessment, prevention and management of pain
in newborns. - Clinical units providing health care to newborns
should develop written guidelines and protocols
for the management of neonatal pain.
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