Department of Pediatrics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2010 Apr;34(4):681-92. doi: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2009.01137.x. Epub 2010 Jan 27.
To examine biobehavioral responses to an acute pain event in a Cape Town, South Africa, cohort consisting of 28 Cape Colored (mixed ancestry) newborns (n = 14) heavily exposed to alcohol during pregnancy (exposed), and born to abstainers (n = 14) or light (< or = 0.5 oz absolute alcohol/d) drinkers (controls).
Mothers were recruited during the third trimester of pregnancy. Newborn data were collected on postpartum day 3 in the maternity obstetrical unit where the infant had been delivered. Heavy prenatal alcohol exposure was defined as maternal consumption of at least 14 drinks/wk or at least 1 incident of binge drinking/mo. Acute stress-related biobehavioral markers [salivary cortisol, heart rate (HR), respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA), spectral measures of heart rate variability (HRV), and videotaped facial actions] were collected thrice during a heel lance blood collection (baseline, lance, and recovery). After a feeding and nap, newborns were administered an abbreviated Brazelton Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale.
There were no between-group differences in maternal age, marital status, parity, gravidity, depression, anxiety, pregnancy smoking, maternal education, or infant gestational age at birth (all ps > 0.15). In both groups, HR increased with the heel lance and decreased during the postlance period. The alcohol-exposed group had lower mean HR than controls throughout, and showed no change in RSA over time. Cortisol levels showed no change over time in controls but decreased over time in exposed infants. Although facial action analyses revealed no group differences in response to the heel lance, behavioral responses assessed on the Brazelton Neonatal Scale showed less arousal in the exposed group.
Both cardiac autonomic and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal stress reactivity measures suggest a blunted response to an acute noxious event in alcohol-exposed newborns. This is supported by results on the Brazelton Neonatal Scale indicating reduced behavioral arousal in the exposed group. To our knowledge, these data provide the first biobehavioral examination of early pain reactivity in alcohol-exposed newborns and have important implications for understanding neuro-/biobehavioral effects of prenatal alcohol exposure in the newborn period.
研究南非开普敦的一个开普有色人种(混合血统)队列在经历急性疼痛事件时的生物行为反应,该队列由 28 名在孕期大量饮酒(暴露组)的婴儿(n = 14)和不饮酒或少量饮酒(< 0.5 盎司纯酒精/天)的母亲所生的婴儿(对照组,n = 14)组成。
在孕期的第三个三个月招募母亲。在婴儿分娩的产科病房收集产后第 3 天的新生儿数据。重度产前酒精暴露定义为母亲每周饮酒至少 14 次或每月至少有 1 次狂饮。在足跟采血过程中(采血前、采血时和采血后恢复期),采集 3 次与急性应激相关的生物行为标志物[唾液皮质醇、心率(HR)、呼吸窦性心律失常(RSA)、心率变异性(HRV)的频谱测量和录像面部动作]。在喂养和小睡后,新生儿接受简短的 Brazelton 新生儿行为评估量表测试。
两组间母亲年龄、婚姻状况、产次、孕次、抑郁、焦虑、孕期吸烟、母亲教育程度或婴儿出生时的胎龄(均 P > 0.15)均无差异。在两组中,HR 在足跟采血时增加,在采血后恢复期下降。暴露组的平均 HR 始终低于对照组,且随时间推移 RSA 无变化。对照组的皮质醇水平随时间无变化,而暴露组的皮质醇水平随时间下降。尽管面部动作分析显示足跟采血时两组间无反应差异,但 Brazelton 新生儿量表评估的行为反应显示暴露组的唤醒程度较低。
心脏自主神经和下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺应激反应测量均提示,暴露于酒精的新生儿对急性有害事件的反应迟钝。Brazelton 新生儿量表的结果也支持这一结论,表明暴露组的行为唤醒程度较低。据我们所知,这些数据首次对酒精暴露新生儿的早期疼痛反应进行了生物行为学研究,对理解新生儿期产前酒精暴露的神经/行为影响具有重要意义。