Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02764424

Pain Management in Neonatal Intensive Care Units by Studying the Autonomic Balance

Pain Management in Neonatal Intensive Care Units by Studying the Autonomic Balance : Interest of the Co-evaluation of NIPE and Hetero-assessment Scale : the NIPE-DOL Study

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
29 (actual)
Sponsor
Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Saint Etienne · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
3 Months
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Fight against the pain caused by the disease or by the diagnostic and therapeutic procedures is a daily and essential concern for the caregiver neonatologist. The quantification of pain is needed to effectively adjust analgesic therapy and by the way, to limit side effects. Several pain scales are now validated for newborns but they are based on one-off measures and hetero assessments often dependent on many factors including the operator. Recent developments in the real time analysis of the cardiac signal under the influence of autonomic control, have led to the development of a new painful stress index. A monitor has recently been developed by Mdoloris® company and provides an Analgesia and Nociception Index (ANI index in children and adults and NIPE index - for Newborn Infant Parasympathetic Evaluation - in newborns). It is based on the study of the heart rate variability and the variations of the sympathetic and parasympathetic indices to stimuli. The validation of this nociception index has not been validated in a neonatal unit where special attention is paid to pain control. The main purpose of our study is to show the consistency of this NIPE index (adapted to newborns) from 2 validated pain scales routinely used in neonatology in non-sedated children, hospitalized in intensive unit and neonatal intensive care unit from the University Hospital of Saint-Etienne (France). The study will involve 40 preterm or term newborn (i.e. with a gestational age between 26 and 42 weeks and less than 3 months of life), hospitalized in neonatal intensive care units of our university hospital (Saint-Etienne - France), who have to acute painful stimuli related to their care.

Detailed description

Fight against the pain caused by the disease or by the diagnostic and therapeutic procedures is a daily and essential concern for the caregiver neonatologist. The quantification of pain is needed to effectively adjust analgesic therapy and by the way, to limit side effects. Several pain scales are now validated for newborns but they are based on one-off measures and hetero assessments often dependent on many factors including the operator. Recent developments in the real time analysis of the cardiac signal under the influence of autonomic control, have led to the development of a new painful stress index. A monitor has recently been developed by Mdoloris® company and provides an Analgesia and Nociception Index (ANI index in children and adults and NIPE index - for Newborn Infant Parasympathetic Evaluation - in newborns). It is based on the study of the heart rate variability and the variations of the sympathetic and parasympathetic indices to stimuli. Clinical correlations have been completed for adult patients during or after general anesthesia. The validation of this nociception index has not been validated in a neonatal unit where special attention is paid to pain control. The main purpose of our study is to show the consistency of this NIPE index (adapted to newborns) from 2 validated pain scales routinely used in neonatology in non-sedated children, hospitalized in intensive unit and neonatal intensive care unit from the University Hospital of Saint-Etienne (France). The study will involve 40 preterm or term newborn (i.e. with a gestational age between 26 and 42 weeks and less than 3 months of life), hospitalized in neonatal intensive care units of our university hospital (Saint-Etienne - France), who have to acute painful stimuli related to their care. Concurrent analysis of autonomic markers (orthosympathetic and parasympathetic indices from time or frequency domain analysis of heart rate variability) will be correlated with the NIPE index in order to study confounding factors that can induce a sympathetic stress without pain sensation and can thus change the indices of nociception. This study based on a real-time analysis of the perception of pain for newborns is a step for the validation of this new tool that could facilitate the real-time newborn pain management. Furthermore, it will allow caregivers the opportunity to adjust therapeutics in non-communicative patients.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICENIPE (MDoloris®)Each file consists of a simultaneous recording of an electrocardiogram signal according to usual practice (cardiac monitor PHILIPS), coupled with a concomitant registration of NIPE (Newborn Infant Parasympathetic Evaluation - MDoloris®). The electrocardiogram signal, respiration rate, oxygen saturation (SpO2) and NIPE are recorded simultaneously on a computer with a capture card. The other indices of Heart Rate Variability will be analyzed offline.

Timeline

Start date
2016-07-01
Primary completion
2016-11-01
Completion
2016-11-01
First posted
2016-05-06
Last updated
2018-10-25

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02764424. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.