| Literature DB >> 29346304 |
Timothy A Warlow1, Richard D W Hain2.
Abstract
Many children with palliative care needs experience difficulty in managing pain. Perhaps none more so than those with severe neurological impairment. For many years; behaviours in these children were misunderstood. As a result; pain was poorly recognised and inadequately managed. Significant advances have been made in the assessment and management of pain in this challenging group of patients. We summarise these advances; drawing on our own experience working with infants; children and young adults with palliative care needs within a UK tertiary paediatric palliative care service. We expand on the recent understanding of 'Total Pain'; applying a holistic approach to pain assessment and management in children with severe neurological impairment.Entities:
Keywords: cerebral palsy; chronic pain; cognitive impairment; neurological impairment; paediatric palliative care; persistent pain; ‘Total Pain’
Year: 2018 PMID: 29346304 PMCID: PMC5789295 DOI: 10.3390/children5010013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Children (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9067
Factors contributing to experience of pain in children.
| Cognitive Appraisal of Pain [ |
|---|
| Context of disease trajectory [ |
| Beliefs about pain [ |
| Existential meanings attached to pain [ |
| Social abandonment [ |
| Anxiety [ |
| Depression [ |
| Fear of implications of pain on disease [ |
| Memories of prior pain [ |
| Distress of prior pain [ |
| Mental isolation [ |
| Boredom [ |
| Fatigue [ |
| Grieving [ |
| Pain tolerance [ |
| Coping ability/strategies [ |
| Cultural implications of pain and associated functional limitations [ |
| Degree of tissue damage |
| Central excitation and inhibition of afferent signals [ |
Sources of nociceptive pain in children with severe neurological impairment (SNI).
| Common | Less Common |
|---|---|
| Musculoskeletal (osteopenia, scoliosis, hip subluxation, pathological fractures) | Dental caries |
| Hypertonia (spasticity, dystonia) | Non-specific back pain |
| Muscle fatigue and immobility | Renal stones and urinary tract infections (UTI) (topiramate, ketogenic diet) |
| Constipation | Pancreatitis (valproate and hypothermia) |
| Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GORD) | Cholecystitis (tube feeding) |
| Gastrointestinal dysmotility (autonomic and post-surgical e.g., fundoplication) | Ventricular shunt blockage, infection |
| Iatrogenic (investigations, surgery) | Headache [ |
| Sources common to all children (e.g., Otitis media, dysmenorrhoea, appendicitis) |
Examination for nociceptive causes of pain in children with SNI.
| Eyes—corneal abrasion |
| Mouth, and throat—dental caries and abscess, gingivitis, tonsillitis |
| Central lines, implanted devices, shunt catheter sites—malfunction, infection |
| Gastrostomy tube—gastrostomy tube tension, site infection |
| Abdomen—constipation, distention |
| Skin—hair tourniquet or pressure ulcer |
| Extremities and joints—occult fracture, subluxation [ |
Pain assessment tools in children with severe neurological impairment (SNI).
| Tool Name | Description | Process of Validation | Key Interpretation | Positive Features | Negative Features |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paediatric Pain Profile (PPP) [ | 20 Item behaviour scale. | Interviews 21 children, 26 professionals + Questionnaire 121 parents to develop scale. Children with severe cognitive impairment. | Robustly developed and validated in real world setting. | Designed specifically for non-verbal children with SNI. | Lengthy compared to FLACC scale. |
| Four-point scale for each item. | Interrater reliability acceptable for combined item score. | Clear difference in pain scores between when in pain and no pain with narrow confidence interval. | Can compare scores with a baseline score. | ||
| Assess pain at baseline, then repeatedly for regular monitoring or to monitor intervention. | Correlation between raters of 0.75. | Reliable between raters. | Descriptors of more than one pain type. | Many behaviours open to significant interpretation. | |
| Designed to be parent held. | Sensitivity of 1.0 and Specificity of 0.91 for moderate/severe pain at PPP score of 14. | Very sensitive and specific for detecting pain. | Takes into account psychosocial aspects. | ||
| Face Legs Activity Cry Consolability (FLACC) [ | Five-items behaviour scale. | Validated on children with varying degrees neurological impairment. | Small sample size of 50 patients in validation study. | Can add individual behaviours to the pain scale for each child. | Validated in a post-surgical population only. |
| Three-point scale per item (0–2). | |||||
| Option for individualised items to be included. | Validated in 52 children with 80 observations per-operatively including video assessment by experts. | Quick, un-ambiguous tool to use. | |||
| Mild pain = 0–3. | Correlations of scores to parental perceived pain good, but cut-offs defined for mild/moderate/severe are not validated. | Fewer behaviours assessed so data less rich to inform assessment. | |||
| Moderate pain = 4–6. | Good inter-rater correlations of total score (0.90 (0.87–0.92)) between nurse observations. | Very high interrater correlations of total score. | |||
| Severe pain = 7–10. | |||||
| Non-Communicating Children’s Pain Checklist—Revised [ | 30 items behaviour scale. | 71 children assessed. Daily 2 h observation for 1 week. Repeated 3 monthly. | Thorough validation of pain tool. | Many behaviours assessed over long assessment period so rich data for pain assessment. | 2 h observation period may be impractical for many carers. |
| Four-point scale per item (0–4). | Inter-rater correlation for total score of 0.46, statistically significant but not strong correlation. Correlation between numerical pain score of parent and pain scale was 0.64 and for researcher and parent pain score 0.72. | High specificity and sensitivity at score cut-off. | |||
| 2 h observation period required per scoring. | Score of 7 or greater had Sensitivity 84% and Specificity 68% for pain. | Weaker correlations between raters and parent rating than other scales. | Behaviours clearly described and unambiguous. |