Symptoms of Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome (NAS) can be attributed largely to dysfunction of the autonomic nervous system in opiate exposed neonates. Vagal tone is a readily available measure of autonomic nervous system functioning. NAS is a widely variable disorder with poorly understood pathophysiology; while all opiate exposed infants will exhibit some signs and symptoms of NAS, only approximately ½ have severe enough symptoms to require pharmacologic therapy. This research seeks to determine the relationship between infant vagal tone and NAS severity. The determination of a link between newborn vagal tone and NAS severity could result in the prediction of infants at risk for severe NAS and provide these infants and mothers with intensified services and early treatment, thereby shortening the course of NAS in the infant.
Consecutively born methadone exposed infants had hert period and cardiac vagal tone measurements extracted via standard EKGs on days 1 and 3 of life. The infant's NAS course was assessed serially.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
65
An EKG will be obtained using a Physio-control EKG monitor (R wave Electronics of Florida) in standard application, with three chest leads. The EKG data is inputted into a vagal tone monitor (Delta Biometrix, Bethesda MD) which computes vagal tone from the EKG signal. This data is then transferred to a disk which is analyzed off-line.
Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
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