Behavioural signs |
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Alertness and sleep-wake state
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Body movements and muscle tension
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Full-term infants withdraw limbs from pain, whereas in preterm infants these responses are more diffuse and harder to control
Strong infants can react with increased muscle tension in arms and legs
Younger or sicker infants can turn flaccid
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Crying
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Healthy, awake, and full-term newborn infants react with moaning or crying that gets more intense and with longer duration with increasing discomfort.
In contrast, infants of lower gestational age, sick, in a sleeping state, or sedated will have difficulties showing a vocal reaction so the absence of crying must not be taken for absence of pain; crying can often be noted as a weaker moaning sound
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Facial activity, grimacing
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Physiological signs |
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Heart rate and heart rate variability (HRV)
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In healthy full-term infants, pain triggers an increased heart rate which leads to increased blood pressure and a red skin color
Conversely, younger and sicker infants may react with an increase or decrease in heart rate, possibly bradycardia
Pain reduces HRV
HRV is best suited for assessing prolonged pain
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Respiration rate
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In robust infants respiration rate will increase as a result of acute pain, whereas the opposite, and even apneas can be seen in preterm infants who do not have energy to trigger the fight-or-flight system
Pain in the thorax-region can lead to impaired breathing
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Oxygen saturation
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Changes in oxygen saturation follows pain-associated changes in respiration and heart rate
Both an increase and decrease of oxygen saturation can be seen, depending on the context
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Cortisol
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Increased levels can be seen after surgery [35] and painful procedures [36]
Measured in plasma, saliva, or urine
High variability, more useful in research than clinically
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Neurophysiological signs |
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Cerebral oxygenation
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Pain measured with Near Infrared Spectroscopy (NIRS) associated with cerebral activation and changes in oxygenated and deoxygenated haemoglobin concentration in the brain
An increase in oxygenated haemoglobin is assumed to reflect neuronal activation caused by pain
NIRS is sensitive to movement artefacts [37,38]
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EEG, evoked potentials
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Multi-channel EEG used as a proxy for neuronal activity with the majority of studies reporting on pain-related event-related potentials during acute painful procedures [39,40]
Primarily used in research, no standard clinical pain assessment method/tool
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Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
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Has shown which areas in the infant brain are activated by pain [41,42]
Not relevant as a bedside pain assessment tool
Can help in developing and validating other measures
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