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J Perinat Neonatal Nurs · Jul 2010
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialThe efficacy of mechanical vibration analgesia for relief of heel stick pain in neonates: a novel approach.
- Lisa R Baba, Jacqueline M McGrath, and Jiexin Liu.
- Nursing Faculty, Department of Nursing, Mesa Community College, Mesa, Arizona 85202, USA. lisa.baba@mcmail.maricopa.edu
- J Perinat Neonatal Nurs. 2010 Jul 1; 24 (3): 274-83.
BackgroundHospitalized infants are often exposed to many painful procedures as a result of their illness or disease process. Untreated or poorly treated pain can have deleterious effects on normal nociceptive pain development as well as future development of pain pathways. Mechanical vibration has been found to be efficacious in adult and pediatric populations for the relief of mild-to-moderate acute and chronic pain. However, little is known about the efficacy of this intervention in the neonatal population.AimThe purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that mechanical vibration would be efficacious in the relief of pain associated with heel sticks in neonates. Heel sticks are one of the most common painful procedures during neonatal hospitalization.Study DesignA random-sequencing crossover design was used with infants acting as their own controls.SubjectsNewborn infants of 35 weeks' gestation or greater (N = 20) met the inclusion criteria for the study.Outcome MeasuresPain during heel stick was measured with the Neonatal Infant Pain Scale. The Neonatal Infant Pain Scale is a nonintrusive tool with extensive evidence of its reliability and validity in the neonatal population, when used by trained observers.ResultsMechanical vibration produced an analgesic effect for infants who had previously experienced painful heel sticks that approached statistical significance.ConclusionsThe apparent limitations of mechanical vibration as analgesia may be due to the concurrent use of sucrose and pacifier, the effects of order (ie, habituation), or type II error. Because vibration produced the predicted positive effect in some circumstances, further investigation in larger samples within a randomized clinical trial is warranted.
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