Topical
anaesthesia and morphine effective in treating
procedural pain in newborn infants
Researchers at The Hospital
for Sick Children (SickKids) have found that intravenous
morphine used alone or with a topical anaesthetic (tetracaine)
effectively reduced levels of pain in newborn infants
undergoing insertion of central venous catheters
(central lines).
This research is reported
in the February 15, 2006 issue of JAMA: The Journal of
the American Medical Association.
About 10 to 15 per cent of
newborns require prolonged hospitalization for
conditions such as preterm birth, congenital defects and
sepsis (a blood stream infection). As part of their
medical care, these infants are often exposed to
multiple invasive procedures that may be painful.
"It was not so long ago
that infants routinely underwent painful procedures
without the benefits of analgesia. Our previous studies
showed that infants do feel extreme pain, that they
remember this pain and that it affects their future pain
responses," said Dr. Anna Taddio, the study's lead
author and principal investigator, a SickKids scientist
and pharmacist, and an assistant professor of Pharmacy
at the University of Toronto.
"Within the last decade,
the pendulum started to swing in the other direction,
and pain relievers began to be used more liberally in
infants. However, more information was needed about the
benefits and risks of the different treatment options.
We undertook this study to determine the most effective
way to manage pain in infants undergoing central line
placements and to delineate the side effects associated
with their use," said Dr. Taddio.
The research team studied
the relative efficacy and safety of a topical
anaesthesia (tetracaine) and intravenous opioid
analgesia (morphine), used alone or in combination, for
management of pain in newborns undergoing insertion of a
central venous catheter. Many hospitalized newborns
require central lines for the administration of
medication and nutrition. The randomized, double-blind,
controlled trial included 132 ventilated newborns in the
neonatal intensive care units at SickKids and Mount
Sinai Hospital, both located in Toronto, Canada, between
June 2000 and July 2005.
The amount of pain was
determined by measuring the proportion of time the
newborns displayed facial grimacing (brow bulge) during
different phases of the central line insertion (skin
preparation, needle puncture and recovery).
"We found that morphine, or
a combination of morphine and tetracaine, to be the most
effective in treating the infants' pain during central
line placement. Topical anaesthesia (tetracaine) alone
was found to be a weak analgesic. This data can be used
to support evidence-based protocols for the management
of pain during central line placements in infants," said
Dr. Taddio. "We believe morphine was more effective
because it reduced the sensory input derived from the
multiple phases of the procedure, while tetracaine
decreased sensation from the needle puncture site
alone."
Both medications were
associated with side effects: morphine caused mild
respiratory depression and tetracaine caused erythema
(abnormal redness of skin).