Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomised Controlled Trial to Evaluate the Role of Repeated Painful Procedures in Preterm Neonates on Short Term Neurobehavioural Outcome
Procedural pain in neonates is recently acknowledged entity and many studies on the use of
pharmacological as well as non pharmacological interventions for alleviation of this pain
have been done. Of these, sucrose with or without non nutritive sucking has been the most
widely studied and accepted form of pain relief. Its analgesic effect is thought to be
mediated by endogenous opioid pathways activated by sweet taste (orogustatory effect).
Although, guidelines based on systematic reviews and meta-analysis for pain management
recommend the use of sucrose solutions for pain relief during procedures, the use of
repeated doses of sucrose with preterm neonates requires further investigation.
Pain may have profound consequences for preterm neonates during a critical time of brain
development. Data derived from animal models suggests that repeated painful stimuli may
result in structural and functional reorganization of the nervous system and alteration in
future pain response. Early pain experience during this critical period in development are
thought to have immediate and long term consequences that could influence physiological,
behavioral and developmental outcomes. Early repetitive procedural pain related stress in
very preterm neonates is associated with poorer neurobehaviour in first 2 years of life.1
This study aims to assess the effect of repeated painful stimuli on short term
neurobehaviour of preterm infants and the efficacy of repeated doses of sucrose used for
pain relief.
DEFINITION OF PAIN - an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience with actual or potential
damage or described in terms of such damage (note that the inability to communicate verbally
or non verbally does not negate the possibility that an individual is having pain and is in
need of appropriate pain relieving treatment)
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND- we as clinicians have emerged from a period of relative neglect of
neonatal pain and are now recognizing the immediate and long term impact of pain on the
neonatal development as well as the need to alleviate pain effectively. Neonatal pain has
been acknowledged and Paediatric societies such as American Academy of Paediatrics and
Canadian paediatric society (2000) have adopted specific guidelines on pain relief in
neonates .
LONG TERM EFFECTS OF CHRONIC PAIN -Early repeated procedural pain in NICU has been proposed
as one of the factors that may contribute to altered development of cognition ,motor
function and behaviour in infants and children born preterm.The vulnerability of preterms is
well established due to their lower pain threshold ,sensitization from repeated pain and
immature systems for maintaining homeostasis .For infants with extremely immature
physiological and neurobehavioural systems ,continual adaptation to repeated challenges
induces long term alterations in pain sensitivity, might affect generalized stress arousal
systems and potentially affect the developing cytotexture of the brain. The physiologic
perturbations associated with early prolonged exposure to episodic pain appear to contribute
to altering the rapidly developing stress systems .Exposure to painful procedures in early
neonatal period affects the long term neurobehavioural outcome.
SCALE USED TO ASSESS SHORT TERM NEUROBEHAVIOUR
NAPI (NEUROBEHAVIOURAL ASSESSMENT OF PRETERM INFANT) -The NAPI is appropriate for infants
between 32 weeks post conceptional age and term. It assesses the relative maturity of
functioning of preterm infants,with higher scores reflecting higher maturity , and can
differentiate 2 weeks PCA . The clinical validity and sensitivity of NAPI were established
using an index of medical complications based on a 1-5 classification range of degrees of
complications21 The items in the motor development cluster include ventral suspension, prone
head raising ,the crawling reflex ,forearm recoil ,power of active movements , and vigor of
spontaneous movements .The alertness and orientation items include percent of time in an
alert state ,duration and quality of alertness , quantitative response to inanimate and
animate visual and auditory stimulation and qualitative ratings that express the nature of
response.
LACUNAE IN KNOWLEDGE -Preterm infants are more prone to undergo multiple painful procedures
due to their prolonged stay in the neonatal intensive care unit and their typical vulnerable
clinical profile.It has now been proved that painful procedures lead to long term changes in
the pain reactivity and also affect the long term neurobehavioural outcome in these preterm
infants.When a medline search was carried out on the subject it did not return any
result.Currently there is no study which has tried to explore the short term
neurobehavioural outcome in preterm babies >32 weeks - <37 weeks of gestation who undergo
multiple painful procedures during their NICU stay.The present study was thus planned to
evaluate the role of sucrose analgesia in alleviating the pain caused by the routine NICU
procedures over a period of 7 days and to assess the early neurobehavioural outcome in these
babies with the help of a well designed double blinded randomized controlled trial.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Screening
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