4.6 Article

Premature Infants Display Discriminable Behavioral, Physiological, and Brain Responses to Noxious and Nonnoxious Stimuli

Journal

CEREBRAL CORTEX
Volume 32, Issue 17, Pages 3799-3815

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhab449

Keywords

EEG; heart rate; neonatal; pain; prematurity

Categories

Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust [207457/Z/17/Z, 215573/Z/19/Z, 221933/Z/20/Z]
  2. Bliss (a UK charity) research grant
  3. Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds Scholarship
  4. Wellcome Trust [221933/Z/20/Z, 207457/Z/17/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study found that heart rate responses increase with age, and noxious-evoked brain activity undergoes three developmental stages, including a previously unreported transitory stage. Additionally, infant responses to noxious and nonnoxious stimuli are discriminable in prematurity.
Pain assessment in preterm infants is challenging as behavioral, autonomic, and neurophysiological measures of pain are reported to be less sensitive and specific than in term infants. Understanding the pattern of preterm infants' noxious-evoked responses is vital to improve pain assessment in this group. This study investigated the discriminability and development of multimodal noxious-evoked responses in infants aged 28-40 weeks postmenstrual age. A classifier was trained to discriminate responses to a noxious heel lance from a nonnoxious control in 47 infants, using measures of facial expression, brain activity, heart rate, and limb withdrawal, and tested in two independent cohorts with a total of 97 infants. The model discriminates responses to the noxious from the nonnoxious procedure with an overall accuracy of 0.76-0.84 and an accuracy of 0.78-0.79 in the 28-31-week group. Noxious-evoked responses have distinct developmental patterns. Heart rate responses increase in magnitude with age, while noxious-evoked brain activity undergoes three distinct developmental stages, including a previously unreported transitory stage consisting of a negative event-related potential between 30 and 33 weeks postmenstrual age. These findings demonstrate that while noxious-evoked responses change across early development, infant responses to noxious and nonnoxious stimuli are discriminable in prematurity.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available