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Text
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URL Address
<a href="http://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2005-0620C" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer">http://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2005-0620C</a>
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Title
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Summary proceedings from the neonatal pain-control group
Publisher
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Pediatrics
Date
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2006
Subject
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Humans; infant; United States; Pain; Pain Measurement; Respiration; Analgesia; Research Support; U.S. Gov't; Newborn; Pain/drug therapy/etiology; Government Regulation; Anesthesia; N.I.H.; Postoperative/drug therapy; Non-P.H.S.; Extramural; General; Outcome Assessment (Health Care)/methods; Artificial/adverse effects; Clinical Trials/ethics/legislation & jurisprudence
Creator
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Anand KJ; Aranda JV; Berde CB; Buckman S; Capparelli EV; Carlo W; Hummel P; Johnston CC; Lantos J; Tutag-Lehr V; Lynn AM; Maxwell LG; Oberlander T; Raju TN; Soriano SG; Taddio A; Walco GA
Description
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Recent advances in neurobiology and clinical medicine have established that the fetus and newborn may experience acute, established, and chronic pain. They respond to such noxious stimuli by a series of complex biochemical, physiologic, and behavioral alterations. Studies have concluded that controlling pain experience is beneficial with respect to short-term and perhaps long-term outcomes. Yet, pain-control measures are adopted infrequently because of unresolved scientific issues and lack of appreciation for the need for control of pain and its long-term sequelae during the critical phases of neurologic maturation in the preterm and term newborn. The neonatal pain-control group, as part of the Newborn Drug Development Initiative (NDDI) Workshop I, addressed these concerns. The specific issues addressed were (1) management of pain associated with invasive procedures, (2) provision of sedation and analgesia during mechanical ventilation, and (3) mitigation of pain and stress responses during and after surgery in the newborn infant. The cross-cutting themes addressed within each category included (1) clinical-trial designs, (2) drug prioritization, (3) ethical constraints, (4) gaps in our knowledge, and (5) future research needs. This article provides a summary of the discussions and deliberations. Full-length articles on procedural pain, sedation and analgesia for ventilated infants, perioperative pain, and study designs for neonatal pain research were published in Clinical Therapeutics (June 2005).
2006
Identifier
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<a href="http://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2005-0620C" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer">10.1542/peds.2005-0620C</a>
Rights
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Article information provided for research and reference use only. PedPalASCNET does not hold any rights over the resource listed here. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Journal Article
2006
Analgesia
Anand KJ
Anesthesia
Aranda JV
Artificial/adverse effects
Backlog
Berde CB
Buckman S
Capparelli EV
Carlo W
Clinical Trials/ethics/legislation & jurisprudence
Extramural
General
Government Regulation
Humans
Hummel P
Infant
Johnston CC
Journal Article
Lantos J
Lynn AM
Maxwell LG
N.I.H.
Newborn
Non-P.H.S.
Oberlander T
Outcome Assessment (Health Care)/methods
Pain
Pain Measurement
Pain/drug therapy/etiology
Pediatrics
Postoperative/drug therapy
Raju TN
Research Support
Respiration
Soriano SG
Taddio A
Tutag-Lehr V
U.S. Gov't
United States
Walco GA