Pain management in children is defined as the assessment and treatment of pain in infants and children. Similar to adults, a child's pain is often tied to emotional and psychological components. Unfortunately, many of the problems that cause children pain are undertreated. Untreated pain can greatly increase the chances of further complications and even death. With this being said, it is important to identify the cause of pain quickly in order to avoid detrimental consequences. There is even a possibility that children can have significant pain related to Epidermolysis Bullosa, Osteogenesis Imperfecta, cancer, metabolic/neurologic diseases, palliative care, and sickle cell disease.
Video Pain management in children
Indications
The indications that treatment is needed are not always clear for children due to some misconceptions.
Treatments can vary among health care providers and are subject to the providers' personalities, culture, beliefs and acceptance of pain in children. Characteristics of pain typically help determine assessment, diagnosis and treatment. Pain can be acute, recurrent, chronic or a combination of these. It can also occur simultaneously in other parts of the body. Pain in children is characterized as having "plasticity and complexity" and in need of timely and continuous assessment. In order to receive the best results, a child should be asked to describe the pain before the questioning of location, intensity, quality, and tolerance. Sometimes, providers' viewpoints and assumptions involving the meaning of a behavior need evaluation. There is "a relatively pervasive and systematic tendency for proxy judgments to underestimate the pain experience of others". The suggested treatments for pain do not always resolve the problem. In some cases, treatments and medications for pain actually cause pain. Minor invasive procedures often don't include a treatment plan for anticipated pain. For example, during circumcision infants do not consistently receive the appropriate pain control. Not only are newborn circumcisions painful, they are also associated with irritability and feeding disturbances for days after the procedure.
Acute pain
Usually, acute pain is generated from an obvious cause and is expected to last for only a few days or weeks. It is usually managed with medication and non-pharmacological treatment to provide comfort. Acute pain is an indication for needed assessment, treatment and prevention. While a child is experiencing pain, physiological changes occur that can further jeopardize healing and recovery. Unrelieved pain can cause alkalosis and hypoxemia that result from rapid, shallow breathing. This shallow breathing then leads to the accumulation of fluid in the lungs, taking away the ability to cough. Pain can cause an increase in blood pressure and heart rate, creating great stress on the heart. Additionally, pain increases the release of anti-inflammatory steroids that reduce the ability to fight infection. These same steroids that are released increase the metabolic rate and impact healing. Another harmful outcome of acute pain is an increase in sympathetic effects such as the inability to urinate. Such aches can even slow down the gastrointestinal system.
Inadequate pain management in children can lead to psycho-social consequences. Disinterest in food, apathy, sleep problems, anxiety, avoidance of discussions about health, fear, hopelessness and powerlessness are just some of the many. Other consequences can be extended hospital stays, high readmission rates and a longer recovery. On the other hand, the American Association of Pediatrics describes pain with immunizations as "The pain associated with the majority of immunizations is minor.".
Examples of harmful consequences due to unrelieved pain:
- infants with higher than average heel sticks can have poor cognitive and motor function
- distress caused by needle-sticks make medical treatments later on more difficult
- children who have experienced invasive procedures oftentimes develop post-traumatic stress
- boys circumcised without anesthesia were found to have greater distress than uncircumcised boys.
- severe pain as a child is associated with higher reports of pain in adults
Acute pain can be expected in response to many if not most invasive procedures. Anticipation of pain and distress can guide a pre-treatment, pain-prevention plan based on past reports of pain associated with the medical procedure. Individuals with technical expertise and experience are more likely to minimize the pain as much as possible. Preparation before a procedure with information that is understood by children and parents decrease distress. Parents can contribute to the improvement of this issue by learning effective methods/ways to comfort their child. Types of procedures determine the use of deep sedation or anesthesia. In some cases, the best method to prevent and relieve pain is by building self-esteem. Suggested cognitive behavioral strategies are: imagery, relaxation, a massage, heat compression, calm adults, a quiet environment, and confident explanations by providers. Since distress can be addressed and controlled, some children benefit from the opportunity for self-regulation. Pain reduction during invasive procedures is closely linked to controlling distress. Treating distress even for minor or uncomplicated procedures, likes venipuncture can be implemented.
Neuropathic pain
Neuropathic pain is associated with nerve injuries or abnormal sensitivities to touch or contact. Causes include past surgeries and amputations.
Cancer pain
Cancer pain can differ from other types of pain. The level of pain experienced by a child that has this disease is related to the stage or extent of the cancer. Children with cancer may sometimes have no pain at all. One child may have a different threshold for pain than another may.
Sources of cancer pain are:
- a growing tumor pressing on a body organ or nerves
- inadequate blood circulation because of blocked blood vessels
- blockage of an organ or a 'tube' of the organ
- the spread of the cancer to other places
- infection
- inflammation
- side effects of chemotherapy, radiation treatment or surgery
- inactivity and stiffness
- depression and anxiety
Recurrent pain
Recurrent pain is pain that arises periodically and can result in absences from school, outside activities, etc. This type of pain may be the most common.
Descriptions are:
- periodic instead of persistent
- consisting of tension and migraine headaches
- abdominal pains
- chest pain and limb pains
Chronic pain
Chronic pain in children is unresolved pain that affects activities of daily living and may result in a significant amount of missed school days. It is characterized as mild to severe and is present for long periods of time. Chronic pain can develop from disease or injury with acute pain. Some have described chronic pain as the pain experienced when the child reports a headache, abdominal pain, back pain, generalized pain or combinations of these. Children that experience chronic pain can have psychological effects. In addition, families may also suffer emotionally when the child experiences pain. Caring for a child in pain does have social consequences related to the disability and limitations that accompany the pain. In regards to outside factors, finding solutions for children in pain may generate additional costs from healthcare and lost wages because of the necessary time off from work.
Maps Pain management in children
Causes
The causes of pain children are similar to causes of pain in adults.
Pain can be experienced in many ways and is dependent upon the following factors in each child:
- prior painful episodes or treatments
- age and developmental stage
- disease or type of trauma
- personality
- culture
- socioeconomic status
- presence of family members and family dynamics.
Assessment
Ongoing and frequent assessment between all those involved in the treatment plan is documented in a readily accessible format - usually the patient record. Assessment of the pain in children depends upon the cooperation and developmental stage of the child. Some children do not have the ability to assist in their assessment because they have not matured enough cognitively, emotionally, or physically.
Younger infants
Signs of distress and possible pain are exhibited by :
- inability to distinguish the stimulus from the pain
- ability to exhibit a reflexive response to pain
- expressions of pain
- tightly closed eyes
- open mouth resembling a square rather than an oval or circle
- lowered eyebrows and tightly drawn together
- rigid body
- thrashing
- loud crying
- increase in heart rate, even while sleeping
Older infants
Signs of distress and pain are exhibited by:
- deliberate withdrawal from pain and possible guarding
- loud crying
- painful facial expressions
Toddlers
A toddler can express distress and pain by:
- expressing pain verbally
- thrashing extremities
- crying loudly
- screaming
- being uncooperative
- pushing away perceived source of pain (palpation)
- anticipating a pain-inducing procedure or event
- requesting to be comforted
- clinging to a significant person, possibly the one perceived as being protective
School-aged children
School-aged children express pain (similar to toddlers) by:
- anticipating the pain but less intensively, understands concepts of time, i.e., imminent vs future pain
- stalling, trying to talk out of the situation where pain is anticipated
- having muscular rigidity
Adolescent
Adolescents express pain by:
- with muscle tension, but with control
- with verbal expressions and descriptions
Quantitative pain assessment
Although pain is subjective and is considered to exist as a spectrum rather than an exact determination, different assessment tools compare pain levels over time. This kind of assessment incorporates pain scales and requires a high enough developmental level so that the child can respond to the question(s). A verbal response is not always necessary to quantify the pain.
Pain scales
A pain scale measures a patient's pain intensity and other features. Pain scales can be based on observational (behavioral) or physiological data, as well as self-report. Self-report is considered primary and should be obtained if possible. Pain measurements help determine the severity, type, and duration of the pain. They are also used to construct an accurate diagnosis, determine a treatment plan, and evaluate the effectiveness of treatment. Pain scales are available for neonates, infants, children, adolescents, adults, seniors, and persons with impaired communication. Pain assessments are often regarded as "the 5th Vital Sign".
During treatment
Clinicians responsible for a child, monitor the child frequently in tertiary care centers (hospitals). Pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments are used to manage the pain. Parents or caregivers are also requested to provide their own pain assessments. At the beginning of pharmacological treatment, clinicians monitor the child for adverse reactions to the medications. The levels of some medications are monitored to ensure that the child is not over-medicated or receives toxic levels of the drug. The levels also provide results that indicate that the levels in the blood are high enough to be effective in managing the pain. Medications are metabolized differently between children of the same age. Factors that influence the levels of medications controlling pain are the height, weight, and body surface of the child in addition to any other illnesses that a child might have. Some medications may have a paradoxical effect in children, which is an effect that is the opposite of the expected effect. Clinicians monitor this and any other reactions to the medication.
Because children process information differently than adults, atraumatic measures are used to reduce anxiety and stress. Treatment centers for children often employ these procedures.
Examples are:
- allowing the parent or caregiver to be present for painful procedures
- using a treatment room for painful procedures to ensure that the child's room is a place where little pain can be expected
- establish other 'pain-free zones' where no medical procedures are allowed (such as a playroom)
- offering choices to the child to give them some control over the procedures
- modelling procedures with dolls and toys
- using age-appropriate vocabulary and anatomical terms the child can understand.
Non-pharmacological pain management
Pain-relieving, non-pharmacological management of discomfort during immunizations include putting sugar on a pacifier, comforting the child during and after the injections, chest-to-chest hugging, and giving the child choices on injection sites. Other non-pharmacological treatments that have been found to be effective include:
- careful explanations of the procedure with pictures or other visual aids
- allow the child to ask questions of medical staff
- tour the place where the procedures will occur
- older children may benefit from watching a video that explains the procedure
- small children can play with dolls or other toys with a clinician to understand the procedure
- hypnosis and imagery with a psychologist or medical doctor can help with techniques that narrow the focus of the child
- distraction with songs, stories, toys, color, videos, TV, or music
- relaxation techniques such as deep breathing or massages
Pharmacotherapy
The use of medications to treat acute, chronic, recurrent and neuropathic pain is most common. Most instances of pain in children are treated with analgesics. These include acetaminophen, NSAIDs, local anesthetics, opioids, and medications for neuropathic pain. The most effective approach to pain management in children is to provide medicine around the clock instead of providing pain relief as needed. Regional anesthesia is also effective and recommended whenever possible. Opioids are effective too but often depress breathing in infants.
Chronic pain treatment
Chronic pain is treated with a variety of medications and non-pharmacological interventions. Opioid tolerance and withdrawal can be seen in the NICU and PICU. Other side effects with opioid use can be: cognition deficits, altered mood, and disturbances of endocrine development. Opioid misuse can occur in adolescents and is associated with the use of alcohol, cigarettes and marijuana.
Non-pharmacological treatment for children in helping to relieve periodic pain episodes and severity includes counselling and behavior modification therapy. The American Association of Pediatrics have suggested that parents be educated on providing round the clock medication administration after their children receive surgery.
Acute pain treatment
For acute pain, multiple medications given at the same time is proven to be most effective. This results in lower pain scores, provides greater relief, allows lower dosing (and side effects), targets different nerve pathways, and can be tailored to the child.
Cancer pain treatment
Cancer pain is managed differently in children. Clinicians treating cancer pain can come from a variety of disciplines or specialties. Typically, medical history, physical examinations, age and overall health of the child is evaluated. The type of cancer may influence decisions about pain management. The extent of the cancer, the tolerance of the child to specific medications, procedure or therapies is also taken into account. The preferences of the parent or caregiver contribute to the determining of the best way to treat cancer pain. For cancer pain, opioids are helpful and can be taken orally. The side effects are: constipation, fatigue, and disorientation. Others are given IV, subcutaneous, or trans-dermal. Switching medications may be necessary at times. Dosing for children is based upon studies with adults or short-term studies. Children can develop opioid tolerance where larger doses are needed to have the same effect. When resistance to opioids develop, the pain responsiveness is reset and pain increases. Tolerance is likely to develop in younger children.
History
In the past, it was believed that the expressions of pain in babies was reflexive and due to the immaturity of the infant brain, the pain could not really be perceived. Attempting to relieve pain in infants was considered futile since it was thought to be impossible to measure the child's pain.
These beliefs along with cultural concerns of opiate addiction contributed to the clinicians decision to withhold pain relief.
In 1994, responding to the need for a more useful system for describing chronic pain, the International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) classified pain by the:
- region of the body involved (e.g. abdomen, lower limbs),
- system whose dysfunction may be causing the pain (e.g., nervous, gastrointestinal),
- duration and pattern of occurrence,
- intensity and time since onset, and
- cause This system was criticized by Clifford J. Woolf and others as inadequate for guiding treatment.
Woolf suggested three categories of pain:
- nociceptive pain,
- inflammatory pain which is associated with tissue damage and the infiltration of immune cells, and
- pathological pain which is a disease state caused by damage to the nervous system or by its abnormal function (e.g. fibromyalgia, peripheral neuropathy, tension type headache, etc.).
References
Bibliography
- Henry, Norma (2016). RN nursing care of children : review module. Stilwell, KS: Assessment Technologies Institute. ISBN 9781565335714.
- Roberts, Michael (2017). Handbook of pediatric psychology. New York: The Guilford Press. ISBN 9781462529780.
- Twycross, Alison (2014). Managing pain in children : a clinical guide for nurses and healthcare professionals. Hoboken: Wiley Blackwell. ISBN 9780470670545.
External links
- Wong-Baker Faces Foundation
- Various Wong-Baker pain scales
- International Children's Palliative Care Network
- Palliative Care
- WHO guidelines on persisting pain in children
Source of the article : Wikipedia