Early human development
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Early human development · Jun 2003
Comparative StudyAre there developmentally distinct motor indicators of pain in preterm infants?
The aims of this study were to examine preterm infant reactions to pain in detail over prolonged time periods using multiple measures, and to assess the value of including specific body movements of the Neonatal Individualized Developmental Care and Assessment Program (NIDCAP) system to evaluate pain. Ten preterm infants born at 31 weeks mean gestational age (GA) and mean birth weight 1676 g were studied during a routine blood collection in a Level III neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). At 32-week post-conceptional age, computerized physiologic and video recordings were obtained continuously for 60 min (prior to, during and after lance). ⋯ HR increased and oxygen saturation decreased post-lance. Infants with more prior pain exposure, lower Apgar, and lower GA at birth, displayed more motor stress cues but less facial activity post-lance. Extension of extremities and finger splay, but not twitches and startles, from the NIDCAP, appear to be stress cues and show promise as clinical pain indicators to supplement facial and physiological pain measures in preterm infants.
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Early human development · Jun 2003
Cardiac adaptation in small for gestational age neonates after prenatal hemodynamic disturbances.
Small for gestational age neonates with prenatal hemodynamic disturbances are at increased risk for neonatal morbidity. Investigations of fetal cardiac function have proved some functional impairments. The aim of the study was to investigate postnatal cardiac adaptation in these neonates in comparison with neonates without prenatal hemodynamic impairments. ⋯ The described findings could be signs of persistent hemodynamic impairments in growth-retarded neonates with prenatal disturbed hemodynamics. The neonates revealed a reduced ability to compensate the prenatal hemodynamic disturbances. This aspect should be included in the discussion of perinatal management in cases of severe growth retardation.