Grunau Ruth E, Holsti Liisa, Haley David W, Oberlander Tim, Weinberg Joanne, Solimano Alfonso, Whitfield Michael F, Fitzgerald Colleen, Yu Wayne
Centre for Community Child Health Research, British Columbia Research Institute for Children's and Women's Health, Vancouver, BC, Canada Department of Pediatrics, University of British Columbia, Canada Department of Anatomy, Cell Biology and Physiology, University of British Columbia, Canada School of Rehabilitation Sciences, University of British Columbia, Canada Children's and Women's Health Centre of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Pain. 2005 Feb;113(3):293-300. doi: 10.1016/j.pain.2004.10.020.
Data from animal models indicate that neonatal stress or pain can permanently alter subsequent behavioral and/or physiological reactivity to stressors. However, cumulative effects of pain related to acute procedures in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) on later stress and/or pain reactivity has received limited attention. The objective of this study is to examine relationships between prior neonatal pain exposure (number of skin breaking procedures), and subsequent stress and pain reactivity in preterm infants in the NICU. Eighty-seven preterm infants were studied at 32 (+/-1 week) postconceptional age (PCA). Infants who received analgesia or sedation in the 72 h prior to each study, or any postnatal dexamethasone, were excluded. Outcomes were infant responses to two different stressors studied on separate days in a repeated measures randomized crossover design: (1) plasma cortisol to stress of a fixed series of nursing procedures; (2) behavioral (Neonatal Facial Coding System; NFCS) and cardiac reactivity to pain of blood collection. Among infants born <or=28 weeks gestational age (GA), but not 29-32 weeks GA, higher cumulative neonatal procedural pain exposure was related to lower cortisol response to stress and to lower facial (but not autonomic) reactivity to pain, at 32 weeks PCA, independent of early illness severity and morphine exposure since birth. Repeated neonatal procedural pain exposure among neurodevelopmentally immature preterm infants was associated with down-regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, which was not counteracted with morphine. Differential effects of early pain on development of behavioral, physiologic and hormonal systems warrant further investigation.
来自动物模型的数据表明,新生儿期的应激或疼痛会永久性地改变其随后对应激源的行为和/或生理反应。然而,新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)中与急性操作相关的疼痛对后期应激和/或疼痛反应的累积影响受到的关注有限。本研究的目的是探讨先前新生儿期疼痛暴露(皮肤破损操作的次数)与NICU中早产儿随后的应激和疼痛反应之间的关系。对87名孕龄32(±1周)的早产儿进行了研究。排除在每次研究前72小时内接受过镇痛或镇静治疗,或任何出生后使用过地塞米松的婴儿。研究结果是婴儿在重复测量随机交叉设计中,于不同日期对两种不同应激源的反应:(1)对一系列固定护理操作应激的血浆皮质醇水平;(2)对采血疼痛的行为(新生儿面部编码系统;NFCS)和心脏反应。在孕龄≤28周(而非29 - 32周)出生的婴儿中,在孕龄32周时,较高的累积新生儿期操作疼痛暴露与对应激的皮质醇反应降低以及对疼痛的面部(而非自主神经)反应降低有关,且独立于出生后的早期疾病严重程度和吗啡暴露情况。神经发育不成熟的早产儿反复经历新生儿期操作疼痛暴露与下丘脑 - 垂体 - 肾上腺轴的下调有关,且这种下调未被吗啡抵消。早期疼痛对行为、生理和激素系统发育的不同影响值得进一步研究。