Literature DB >> 24042350

Self-regulation (recovery) from pain: association between time-based measures of infant pain behavior and prenatal exposure to maternal depression and anxiety.

Fay F Warnock1, Kenneth D Craig, Roger Bakeman, Thaila Castral.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Capacities for self-regulation that influence infant adaptation to noxious stimulation require investigation of changes in behavior over time. Prenatal exposure to maternal depression and anxiety (MDA) has been linked to altered infant pain reactivity; however, findings are inconclusive about MDA dynamic impacts on recovery. This study quantified the temporal profile of behavioral response and recovery to routine heel lance (HL) of infants with and without prenatal-MDA exposure. Aims were to examine whether MDA were associated with alterations in time-based measures of infant behavior and sequential patterning in pain expression.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Videotaped facial, body, and cry behaviors of 21 full-term newborns were coded second-by-second for the duration of HL (baseline, HL, Post-HL) using validated behavioral coding systems. Mean heart rate and proportion of time infants spent exhibiting behavioral measures were compared between infant groups and over subphases of HL. Simple regressions, latency, and Yule-Q measures of effect size examined which behaviors were predicted by prenatal-MDA and magnitude of sequential association between first and subsequent behavior.
RESULTS: During HL, all infants reacted immediately and substantially on heart rate, facial, body, and cry measures. Facial reactivity was followed within 2 seconds by body and cry behavior. There were no group differences in magnitude of initial behavioral reactions, but during Post-HL, MDA-exposed infants spent more time crying in a weak/exhausted manner and displayed strained and erratic limb movement and immobility.
CONCLUSIONS: Temporal measures can further help in understanding of infant complex behavioral responses to pain. Delayed recovery in MDA-exposed infants suggested diminished capacities for self-regulation of noxious distress.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24042350     DOI: 10.1097/AJP.0000000000000002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin J Pain        ISSN: 0749-8047            Impact factor:   3.442


  2 in total

Review 1.  A child in pain: A psychologist's perspective on changing priorities in scientific understanding and clinical care.

Authors:  Kenneth D Craig
Journal:  Paediatr Neonatal Pain       Date:  2020-08-04

2.  The relationship of prenatal maternal depression or anxiety to maternal caregiving behavior and infant behavior self-regulation during infant heel lance: an ethological time-based study of behavior.

Authors:  Fay F Warnock; Kenneth D Craig; Roger Bakeman; Thaila Castral; Jila Mirlashari
Journal:  BMC Pregnancy Childbirth       Date:  2016-09-07       Impact factor: 3.007

  2 in total

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