Abstract

Newborns in intensive care are regularly exposed to minor painful procedures at developmental time points when noxious stimulation would be normally absent. Pain from these interventions is inconsistently treated and often exists concurrently with systemic infection, a common comorbidity of prematurity. Our understanding of the independent and combined effects of early painful experiences and infection on pain response is incomplete. The main goals of this research therefore were to understand how pain and infection experienced early in life influence future nociceptive and affective responses to painful stimuli. Rat pups were infected with E-coli on postnatal day 2 (PN2) and had left hind paw injury with carrageenan on PN3. Standard thermal tests for acute pain, formalin tests for inflammatory pain, and conditioned place aversion testing were performed at different ages to assess the nociceptive and affective components of the pain response. Early E-coli infection and early inflammatory injury with carrageenan both independently increased pain scores following hind paw reinjury with formalin on PN8, with effects persisting into adulthood in the carrageenan exposed group. When experienced concurrently, early E-coli infection and carrageenan exposure also increased conditioned aversion to pain in adults. Effect of sex was significant only in formalin testing, with males showing higher pain scores in infancy and females showing higher pain scores as adults. These findings demonstrate that infection experienced early in life can alter both the nociceptive and affective components of the pain response and that there is a cumulative effect of local and systemic pro-inflammatory processes on the aversive component of pain.

Highlights

  • Painful procedural interventions are a necessary aspect of neonatal intensive care, yet our knowledge of the effects of these interventions remains limited

  • As inflammatory markers are elevated following development of systemic infection in human infants and impaired weight gain is seen in animals with systemic infection, the increased levels of ACTH and interleukin 1β and slower weight gain observed in E-coli inoculated animals verified that these animals were successfully infected

  • Whereas exposure to carrageenan and systemic infection early in life did not alter acute sensitivity to detection of painful stimuli in pups, each resulted in an increased behavioral response to evoked pain in infancy and development of a long-term aversion to pain in adults

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Summary

Introduction

Painful procedural interventions are a necessary aspect of neonatal intensive care, yet our knowledge of the effects of these interventions remains limited. Multiple epidemiological studies worldwide have shown that infants in NICU settings experience an average of 12 painful procedures each day, with the majority occurring in infants

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