pain assessment najmeh ajoodanian, ms, nicu 2014

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Page 1: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014
Page 2: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

PAIN AssessmentPAIN Assessment

Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU

2014

Page 3: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Pain Perception

• 28 week of gestation

• pain threshold that is 30% to 50% lower than that of adults

• lower pain tolerance than older children

• Premature infants are even more hypersensitive to nociceptive stimuli than full-term infants

Page 4: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

• As the fifth vital sign,

• pain needs to be monitored routinely

in the clinical practice

• infants cannot speak and advocate

Pain . . .

Page 5: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Pain . . .

• Pain assessment and measurement are the cornerstones of pain management

• The purpose of this review pain measures in both preterm and full term newborns by introducing a conceptual framework

Page 6: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

The International Association for the Study of Pain

(IASP)

“an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described

in terms of such damage.”

“Pain is subjective”

defines pain

Page 7: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

FRAMEWORK FOR MEASUREMENT OF NEONATAL PAIN

Page 8: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Neonatal Pain Responses

• Behavioral

• Physiologic

• Autonomic

• Biochemical

Page 9: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Behavioral Pain Responses

• Facial expression cleaning the heel or changing diapers

• Facial expression include:

• facial grimacing, brows bulged and furrowed

• eye squeezed, nasolabial furrowing,

• lips opened and pursed, cupped tongue, quivering chin

• agitation.

Page 10: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Crying is a common response to pain in infants

preterm and acutely ill infants may not audibly cry during heel sticks and other painful procedures silent cry

Page 11: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Observations of gross motor responses including:

• body movements of arms, legs and trunks,

• Whole body, finger splay and fisting,

• attempts to withdraw from a painful stimulus

Page 12: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Observation sleep wake alterations

Page 13: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Physiologic Responses

• increases in heart rate, respiratory rate, blood pressure

• increases intracranial pressure, and palmar sweating

• decreases in transcutaneous oxygen saturation, vagal tone, and peripheral blood flow

Page 14: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Autonomic Responses

• changes in skin color, nausea, vomiting, gagging

• hiccoughing, diaphoresis, palmar sweating

• dilated pupils

Page 15: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Biochemical Responses

• increased secretion of catecholamines (ie, norepinephrine and epinephrine), glucagon, and corticosteroids or cortisol

• decreased prolactin, insulin, and immune responses

Page 16: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Infant Contextual Parameters inPain Assessment

• Age

• Previous pain experiences

• Gender

• Health status

• especially in preterm infants

Page 17: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Health providers’ knowledge, ability, and

attitudes toward neonatal pain are

significant factors in observation, and using

appropriate pain tools to recognize a

neonate’s pain.

Page 18: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

PAIN ASSESSMENT TOOLS

1. Unidimensional Tools

2. Multidimensional Tools

Page 19: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Unidimensional Infant Pain Measures

• Designed for measurement of acute/procedural pain

• MAX: Maximally Discriminative Facial Coding System

• NFCS: Neonatal Facial Coding System

• IBCS: Infant Body Coding System;

• DAN: Douleur Aiguë du

• BIIP: Behavioral Indicator of Infant Pain

Page 20: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Unidimensional Infant Pain Measures

• Designed for measurement of postoperative pain

• CSS: Clinical Scoring System

• LIDS: Livepool Infant Distress Scale

• FLACC: Face, legs, activity, cry, consolability

• UWCH: University of Wisconsin Children’s Hospital Pain Scale

• CHIPPS: Children’s and Infant’s Postoperative

• Pain Scale

Page 21: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Unidimensional Infant Pain Measures

Designed for measurement of prolonged pain

•BPS: Behavioral Pain Score

•EDIN: Echelle Douleur Inconfort Nouveau-Ne Neonatal Pain and Discomfort Scale

•COMFORTneo: modified from the COMFORT

Page 22: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Multidimensional Infant Pain Measures

Designed for measurement of acute/procedural pain

•NIPS: Neonatal Infant Pain Scale;

•NPAT: Neonatal Pain Assessment Tool

•PIPP: Premature Infant Pain Profile

•DSVNI: Distress Scales for Ventilated Newborn

•Infants

Page 23: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Multidimensional Infant Pain Measures

Designed for measurement of acute/procedural pain

•SUN: Scale for Use in Newborns

•PAIN: Pain Assessment in Neonates

•BPSN: Bernese Pain Scale for Neonates

•FANS: Faceless Acute Neonatal Pain Scale

Page 24: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Multidimensional Infant Pain Measures

Designed for measurement of postoperative pain

•COMFORT Scale (not primarily developed for neonates

•PAT: Pain Assessment Tool

•CRIES

•MIPS: L Modified Infant Pain

•MAPS: Multidimensional Assessment Pain Scale;

Page 25: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Multidimensional Infant Pain Measures

Designed for measurement of prolonged/ongoing pain

•N-PASS: Neonatal Pain, Agitation, and Sedation Scale

Page 26: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Premature Infant Pain Profile

Page 27: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

CRIES scale

• C-crying

• R-requires O2

• I-increased VS

• E-expression

• S-sleepless

Simple and easy to use-uses a scale of 1-10, similar to APGAR scoring

score of 4 or greater requires intervention

objective and behavioral categories

Page 28: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

FLACC Scale

• F-face (expression)

• L-legs (tone)

• A-activity

• C-cry

• C-consolability

score is tallied, similar to APGAR (0,1, or 2 for each category)

greater than 4 is indicative of pain

behaviorally based

Page 29: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Measure Age Level Indicator Pain Stimulus

CRIES

Preterm & Full- term Up to 60 Weeks gestation age

Crying, requires O2 for saturation, increased vital signs (HR and BP), expression, sleepless

Postoperative Pain

BPSN

Preterm & Full- term neonates Time to calm, skin color, eyebrow bulge with eye squeeze, posture, breathing pattern, heart rate, oxygen saturation

Procedural pain in neonates with or without ventilation

NIPS Preterm & Full- term neonates Facial expression, cry, breathing pattern, arms, legs, state of arousal

Procedural pain

PAT

Full- term neonates Posture, tone, sleep pattern, expression, color, cry, respiration, heart rate, oxygen saturation, blood pressure, nurses perception of infant pain

postoperative pain

PIPP

Preterm & Full- term neonates Gestational age, behavioral state, heart rate, oxygen saturation, brow bulge, eye squeeze, nasolabial furrow

Procedural and postoperative pain

SUN

Preterm & Full- term infants Central nervous system state, breathing, movement, tone, face, heart rate, blood pressure

Procedural pain

Page 30: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

New Techniques for Pain Measurement

• Heart Rate Variability

• Skin Conductance

• Brain-Oriented Approach

Page 31: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

Thank you for your attention

Page 32: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

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If you have any question contact to:

[email protected]

Page 33: PAIN Assessment Najmeh Ajoodanian, MS, NICU 2014

References

Cong X. Cusson RM. Pain Assessment and Measurement. Foundations in Newborn Care. 2013;379-395

Kenner C, Lott JW. Comprehensive Neonatal care an interdisciplinary approach chapter 17: Pain in the Newborn and Infant . 2010

Verklan MT, Walden M. Care curriculum for Neonatal intensive care unit 2010