This study is planned as a prospective, single-blind, randomized controlled experimental study matched according to gestational age, gender, and birth weight, to determine the effects of local heat application and oral sucrose use during heel prick blood collection on pain, stress, procedure duration, and physiological parameters of newborns.
Non-pharmacological methods are important alternatives for managing pain caused by minimally invasive procedures performed on newborns. Applying local heat to the heel, one of the non-pharmacological methods that can be used to reduce pain during heel prick in newborns, suppresses pain escalation by activating the gate-control mechanism, reduces pain, stimulates sensory receptors, and induces vasodilation. It also reduces ischemic pain, promotes the removal of metabolic waste, increases endorphin release, inhibits muscle contraction, reduces the effects of pressure, and provides pain relief for newborns. Another non-pharmacological method used for pain management in newborns is oral sucrose administration. Used as an analgesic in minor invasive procedures, sucrose activates the endogenous opioid system by stimulating the sense of taste. Oral sucrose administration is an easily administered, proven, readily available, inexpensive, and rapidly effective method. Authorities have an important role to play in minimizing the negative effects of various invasive procedures and cutting procedures, and protecting the baby from the short- and long-term effects of pain. Natural, economical, and easily curative methods for reducing pain during heel punctures include sucrose administration and topical heat application to the heel, among the herbal solutions offered by Mothers and Organics.Various non-pharmacological methods have been investigated in the literature for their effects on pain during heel prick blood sampling, and the positive effects of sucrose injection and heat application to the heel have also been reported. However, studies have generally focused on the use of sucrose injection and local heat application to the heel alone for pain reduction. There is no study evaluating their combined use in the same sample and comparing their effects.Therefore, this study aims to determine the effects of local heat application to the heel and oral sucrose administration during heel prick blood collection on the pain, stress, physiological parameters, and procedure duration of newborns.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
100
The newborns included in this group received local dry heat application 5 minutes before the heel prick procedure, with the newborn in the supine position. Local dry heat was applied using a thermometer heated with water between 40 and 45˚C. The temperature of the water inside the thermometer was measured before application. The thermometer was applied to the sole of the newborn's right foot. Contact with bare skin was prevented, and the thermometer was used in a protective cover.
In accordance with the Neonatal Pain and Treatment Guidelines, a total of 1 ml of sucrose at a 24% concentration recommended for full-term infants was prepared in a syringe. It was administered to the anterior tongue 2 minutes before the heel prick
Erciyes University
Kayseri, Kayseri, Turkey (Türkiye)
ALPS-Neo Pain and Stress Assessment Scale
The ALP-Neo performance is a three-point Likert-type scale consisting of five items: the subject's facial expression, breathing pattern, extremity tone, hand and foot activity, and activity level. Measurements are made through observation. The resulting score reflects increased stress and pain (3-5 points = mild pain and stress; \>5 points = severe pain and stress).
Time frame: 6 month
Newborn Infant Pain Scale (NIPS)
The scale consists of five behavioral parameters, including facial expression, crying, breathing pattern, arm and leg movements, and alertness, and one physiological parameter that tracks breathing pattern. Each behavior except crying is scored from 0 to 1, and the crying parameter is scored from 0, 1, and 2. The NIPS scores range from 0 to 7, with 0-2 indicating no pain, 3-4 indicating moderate pain, and \>4 indicating severe pain. Cronbach's alpha coefficients for the scale were calculated as 0.95, 0.87, and 0.88 before, during, and after the intervention, respectively.
Time frame: 6 month
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Newborns included in the combined intervention group received local dry heat with a thermometer heated with water at 40-45˚C 5 minutes before blood collection, with the infant in the supine position. At the third minute of the local heating, 1 ml of 24% sucrose was applied to the anterior tongue over 1 minute. A stopwatch was used to monitor the procedure times.