Neonatal facial and cry responses to invasive and non-invasive procedures

&NA; Evaluation of pain in neonates is difficult due to their limited means of communication. The aim was to determine whether behavioural reactions of cry and facial activity provoked by an invasive procedure could be discriminated from responses to non‐invasive tactile events. Thirty‐six healthy full‐term infants (mean age 2.2 h) received 3 procedures in counterbalanced order: intramuscular injection, application of triple dye to the umbilical stub, and rubbing thigh with alcohol. Significant effects of procedure were found for total face activity and latency to face movement. A cluster of facial actions comprised of brow bulging, eyes squeezed shut, deepening of the naso‐labial furrow and open mouth was associated most frequently with the invasive procedure. Comparisons between the 2 non‐invasive procedures showed more facial activity to thigh swabbing and least to application of triple dye to the umbilical cord. Acoustic analysis of cry showed statistically significant differences across procedures only for latency to cry and cry duration for the group as a whole. However, babies who cried to two procedures showed higher pitch and greater intensity to the injection. There were no significant differences in melody, dysphonation, or jitter. Methodological difficulties for investigators in this area were examined, including criteria for the selection of cries for analysis, and the logical and statistical challenges of contrasting cries induced by different conditions when some babies do not always cry. It was concluded that facial expression, in combination with short latency to onset of cry and long duration of first cry cycle typifies reaction to acute invasive procedures.

[1]  Elizabeth A. Hembree,et al.  Infants' emotion expressions to acute pain: Developmental change and stability of individual differences. , 1987 .

[2]  K. Craig,et al.  Facial expression during induced pain. , 1985, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[3]  C. Celeste Johnston,et al.  Acute pain response in infants: a multidimensional description , 1986, Pain.

[4]  Barry M. Lester,et al.  A biosocial model of infant crying , 1984 .

[5]  R. Jennrich,et al.  Unbalanced repeated-measures models with structured covariance matrices. , 1986, Biometrics.

[6]  H. Oster Facial Expression and Affect Development , 1978 .

[7]  K. Michelsson,et al.  Twenty-Five Years of Scandinavian Cry Research , 1985 .

[8]  S. Dworkin,et al.  Facial expressions of pain and emotions in chronic TMD patients , 1988, Pain.

[9]  Y Horii,et al.  Differences in fundamental frequency, jitter, and shimmer among four types of infant vocalizations. , 1986, Journal of communication disorders.

[10]  V. Dubowitz,et al.  The infant cry. A spectrographic and auditory analysis , 1970 .

[11]  B. Lester,et al.  A Biobehavioral Perspective on Crying in Early Infancy , 1982 .

[12]  Michael J. Corwin,et al.  A Physioacoustic Model of the Infant Cry , 1985 .

[13]  R. Miller,et al.  Neonatal pain cries: effect of circumcision on acoustic features and perceived urgency. , 1986, Child development.

[14]  Theodore Shapiro,et al.  Measuring Emotions in Infants and Children , 1982 .

[15]  D. Rubin INFERENCE AND MISSING DATA , 1975 .

[16]  Y Horii,et al.  Spectral energy distribution in four types of infant vocalizations. , 1988, Journal of communication disorders.

[17]  C. C. Johnston,et al.  Acoustical attributes of infant pain cries: Discriminating features , 1987, PAIN.

[18]  P. S. Zeskind,et al.  The Relation between Variations in Pitch and Maternal Perceptions of Infant Crying. , 1988 .

[19]  H. Prechtl,et al.  Behavioural State Cycles of Normal Newborn Infants: A Comparison of the Effect of Early and Late Cord Clamping , 1973, Developmental medicine and child neurology.

[20]  T. Field Individual Differences in the Expressivity of Neonates and Young Infants , 1982 .

[21]  Kenneth D. Craig,et al.  Pain expression in neonates: facial action and cry , 1987, Pain.