From foodconsumer.org
Limit sucrose as painkiller for newborns
By news release
Jun 30, 2008 - 2:06:28 PM
Contact: Janice Nicholson
janice.nicholson@sickkids.ca
416-813-6684
Canadian Medical Association Journal
Randomized controlled trial
Using
sucrose to reduce pain in newborns undergoing painful procedures should
be limited to babies having blood taken (venipuncture) for the newborn
screening test but not for intramuscular injections, write Dr. Anna
Taddio and co-authors.
In this double-blind, randomized
controlled trial of 240 newborns at Toronto's Mount Sinai Hospital,
researchers found that "sucrose reduced overall pain in newborns when
administered before painful medical procedures during the first 2 days
after birth." However, "unexpectedly, we did not observe analgesic
effects during either intramuscular injection of vitamin K in either
group [newborns of diabetic and nondiabetic mothers] or during repeated
heel-lancing for blood glucose monitoring in newborns of diabetic
mothers."
As all newborns experience pain from medical
procedures in the first days of life, the results of this study will be
helpful in reducing pain responses. The authors recommend updating pain
management guidelines to reflect these findings.