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Skin-to-skin contact and/or oral 25% dextrose for procedural pain relief for term newborn infants.

Authors :
Chermont AG
Falcão LF
de Souza Silva EH
de Cássia Xavier Balda R
Guinsburg R
Source :
Pediatrics [Pediatrics] 2009 Dec; Vol. 124 (6), pp. e1101-7.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Objective: The goal was to compare the efficacy of oral 25% dextrose treatment and/or skin-to-skin contact for analgesia in term newborns during intramuscular injection of a hepatitis B vaccine.<br />Methods: A prospective, randomized, partially blinded, clinical trial was performed with 640 healthy term newborns. Infants at 12 to 72 hours of life were assigned randomly to receive an intramuscular injection of hepatitis B vaccine in the right thigh according to 4 analgesia groups, that is, no analgesia (routine); oral 25% dextrose treatment, given 2 minutes before the injection; skin-to-skin contact, initiated 2 minutes before the injection and persisting throughout the procedure; and a combination of the oral dextrose treatment and skin-to-skin contact strategies. For all groups, Neonatal Facial Coding System and Neonatal Infant Pain Scale scores were evaluated before the procedure, during thigh cleansing, during the injection, and 2 minutes after the injection. Premature Infant Pain Profile scores also were assessed for all infants. Pain scores were compared among the 4 groups.<br />Results: The use of oral 25% dextrose treatment reduced the duration of procedural pain in the studied population. Skin-to-skin contact decreased injection pain and duration. The combination of the 2 analgesic measures was more effective than either measure separately for term newborns.<br />Conclusions: Nonpharmacologic analgesic measures were effective for the treatment of procedural pain in term infants. The combination of oral 25% dextrose treatment and skin-to-skin contact acted synergistically to decrease acute pain in healthy neonates.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1098-4275
Volume :
124
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Pediatrics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
19948613
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2009-0993