Newborn Cortical Response to Pain and Non Pharmacological Analgesia

Authors
Category Primary study
Registry of Trialsclinicaltrials.gov
Year 2016
Minor painful procedures are frequently performed on newborn infants and non-pharmacological analgesia is commonly used. As more than one analgesic method may be applied simultaneously in clinical practice, the relative contribution and efficacy of analgesic components still needs to be further elucidated. In the present study neonatal cortical brain response during four types of non-pharmacological analgesia (oral glucose, expressed breastmilk, maternal holding plus oral glucose, maternal holding plus breastfeeding) will be studied. The aim is to assess the differential effect of oral solutions (glucose, breastmilk), when given alone or in combination with maternal relationship (holding, breastfeeding). The study will test the hypothesis that the mother-infant relationship would improve the analgesic effect of oral solutions.
Epistemonikos ID: 9877bdd40e98f1cd0c1ed0b4783c3e1406fd652d
First added on: May 21, 2024