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Biobehavioural reactivity to pain in preterm infants: a marker of neuromotor development

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2006

Ruth E Grunau
Affiliation:
Centre for Community Child Health Research, Child and Family Research Institute, Canada.
Michael F Whitfield
Affiliation:
Department of Pediatrics, University of British Columbia, Canada.
Taryn Fay
Affiliation:
Centre for Community Child Health Research, Child and Family Research Institute, Canada.
Liisa Holsti
Affiliation:
School of Rehabilitation Sciences, University of British Columbia, Canada.
Timothy Oberlander
Affiliation:
Department of Pediatrics, University of British Columbia, Canada.
Marilynn L Rogers
Affiliation:
Children's and Women's Health Centre of BC, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
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Abstract

In this preliminary study, it was examined whether capacity to react to external stress (acute pain) during neonatal intensive care predicts later neuromotor development at 4 and 8 months corrected chronological age (CCA) in high-risk preterm infants. Behavioural and cardiac reactivity to blood collection at 32 weeks postconceptional age (PCA) were recorded in addition to developmental outcomes at 4 and 8 months CCA in 35 preterm infants (17 males, 18 females) born [les ]800g and/or [les ]25 weeks gestational age (GA). Pain reactivity during routine heel lance for blood collection at 32 weeks GA was measured using a composite score derived from the Neonatal Facial Coding System, change in infant sleep/wake state, and spectral analysis of heart rate. Motor development was assessed using the Movement Assessment of Infants scale and the Bayley Scales of Infant Development. Low biobehavioural pain reactivity at 32 weeks PCA was associated with poorer overall quality of motor function at 8 months CCA, but not at 4 months CCA. It was concluded that pain reactivity before discharge from the neonatal intensive care unit may be a useful marker of neuromotor development in infancy.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
2006 Mac Keith Press

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