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Release Date: August 31, 1999
Contact: Kerry S. Courneya, PhD
(780) 492-1031
kerry.courneya@ualberta.ca
Infant Pain May Have Long-Term Effects
Newborn infants who are exposed to a series of painful and stressful treatments display
a variety of long-term effects as older children, including an altered response to pain
and an exaggerated physiological response to stress, new research shows.
Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine, British Columbia
Children's Hospital, and Arkansas Children's Hospital examined the growing body
of evidence of long-term effects of early pain and stress on human infants.
"Pain and stress have been shown to induce significant physiological and
behavioral reactions in newborn infants, even those born prematurely," said Fran Lang
Porter, PhD, lead author of the research. "There is now evidence that these early
events not only induce acute changes, but that permanent structural and functional changes
may also result."
Newborn infants, including those born prematurely, have functional nervous systems that
are capable of perceiving pain, the researchers say. While many physicians have become
aware of the need for anesthesia during circumcisions, for example, little is routinely
done for infants who may face repeated needle sticks and other stressful conditions while
in a neonatal intensive care unit. The research is reported in the current issue of the
Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics.
"Caregivers daily face discrepancies between what they believe should be done to
alleviate the pain of their [infant] patients and what they actually do to reach that
goal," said Porter.
"Much of the early evidence for the long-term effects of pain and stress on
newborns has come from animal studies," said Porter. "For example, rats given
daily injections of saline as infants showed an increased stress response in adulthood
after receiving an electric shock or surgery, and this response was associated with
changes in stress hormone receptors in certain regions of the brain."
In humans, premature infants who were exposed to "multiple noxious stimuli"
in the neonatal intensive care unit were less sensitive and responsive to everyday pain at
18 months of age. In another study, full-term circumcised boys reacted more strongly than
uncircumcised boys to the pain of a routine vaccination at four to six months.
"While it remains unclear whether young infants can remember painful experiences
as actual events, there is evidence that memory for pain may be recorded at a biological
level," said Porter. "At six months of age, however, most infants appear capable
of rememberingdisplaying fear in anticipation of a previously experienced painful
procedure."
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The Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics is
published bimonthly by the Society for Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics. For
information about the journal, contact Mary Sharkey at (212) 595-7717.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Petrina Chong
Director of Communications
202.387.2829
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