Abstract

SummaryNewborn infants display strong nociceptive behavior in response to tissue damaging stimuli, and this is accompanied by nociceptive activity generated in subcortical and cortical areas of the brain [1, 2]. In the absence of verbal report, these nociceptive responses are used as measures of pain sensation in newborn humans, as they are in animals [3, 4]. However, many infants are raised in a physiologically stressful environment, and little is known about the effect of background levels of stress upon their pain responses. In adults, acute physiological stress causes hyperalgesia [5, 6, 7], and increased background stress increases pain [8, 9, 10], but these data cannot necessarily be extrapolated to infants. Here we have simultaneously measured nociceptive behavior, brain activity, and levels of physiological stress in a sample of 56 newborn human infants aged 36–42 weeks. Salivary cortisol (hypothalamic pituitary axis), heart rate variability (sympathetic adrenal medullary system), EEG event-related potentials (nociceptive cortical activity), and facial expression (behavior) were acquired in individual infants following a clinically required heel lance. We show that infants with higher levels of stress exhibit larger amplitude cortical nociceptive responses, but this is not reflected in their behavior. Furthermore, while nociceptive behavior and cortical activity are normally correlated, this relationship is disrupted in infants with high levels of physiological stress. Brain activity evoked by noxious stimulation is therefore enhanced by stress, but this cannot be deduced from observation of pain behavior. This may be important in the prevention of adverse effects of early repetitive pain on brain development.

Highlights

  • Cortical and Behavioral Nociceptive Responses to Heel Lance We measured nociceptive behavior and brain activity in response to the time-locked heel lance in individual infants

  • The Relationship between Infant Nociceptive Behavior and Cortical Activity We examined the relationship between nociceptive behavior and brain activation following the noxious heel lance in individual infants

  • The Cortical, but Not Behavioral, Nociceptive Response Is Related to the Stress Measures To explore the reason for this dissociation, we looked at the relationship between stress and nociceptive behavior and cortical activity separately

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Summary

Objectives

While we aimed to measure background levels of physiological stress, we noted that the noxious stimulus itself did not cause an acute, reactive stress response

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