Neonatal Neurobehavior Predicts Neonatal Opioid Withdrawal Syndrome Severity Prior to Treatment Interventions

IF 3.5 2区 医学 Q1 PEDIATRICS Journal of Pediatrics Pub Date : 2025-06-01 Epub Date: 2025-03-11 DOI:10.1016/j.jpeds.2025.114533
Sarah E. Maylott PhD , Madeleine Bruce PhD , Lydia Brown BS , Ayla J. Castano BS , Lynne Dansereau MSPH , Barry Lester PhD , Elisabeth Conradt PhD
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Abstract

Objective

To utilize the NeoNatal Neurobehavioral Scale (NNNS-II) as a standardized and reliable tool to help guide treatment of neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome (NOWS) with the goal of improving the consistency and quality of care provided to opioid-exposed newborns.

Study design

We examined NOWS severity through several indicators, including the number of pharmacological treatment medications, maximum dose of medications, length of treatment, and maximum score on NOWS observational tools to create an overall severity score for each newborn. Then we examined whether NOWS risk could be detected as early as 24 hours after birth using the NNNS-II to predict NOWS severity.

Results

Newborn neurobehavior prior to signs of NOWS predicted NOWS severity. Newborns who were more hypertonic and had poorer quality of movement had higher severity scores.

Conclusion

These findings indicate that NOWS risk detection may be enhanced with an early newborn neurobehavioral assessment.
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新生儿神经行为可预测治疗干预前新生儿阿片类药物戒断综合征的严重程度。
目的:利用新生儿神经行为量表(NNNS-II)作为一种标准化、可靠的工具,帮助指导新生儿阿片类药物戒断综合征(NOWS)的治疗,以提高对阿片类药物暴露新生儿护理的一致性和质量。研究设计:我们通过几个指标来检查NOWS的严重程度,包括药物治疗药物的数量、药物的最大剂量、治疗时间和NOWS观察工具的最高评分,以创建每个新生儿的总体严重程度评分。然后,我们检查了是否可以在出生后24小时使用NNNS-II来预测NOWS的严重程度。结果:新生儿神经行为在NOWS症状出现之前预测了NOWS的严重程度。高渗和运动质量较差的新生儿的严重程度评分较高。结论:这些发现表明新生儿早期神经行为评估可以提高NOWS风险检测。
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来源期刊
Journal of Pediatrics
Journal of Pediatrics 医学-小儿科
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
2.00%
发文量
696
审稿时长
31 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Pediatrics is an international peer-reviewed journal that advances pediatric research and serves as a practical guide for pediatricians who manage health and diagnose and treat disorders in infants, children, and adolescents. The Journal publishes original work based on standards of excellence and expert review. The Journal seeks to publish high quality original articles that are immediately applicable to practice (basic science, translational research, evidence-based medicine), brief clinical and laboratory case reports, medical progress, expert commentary, grand rounds, insightful editorials, “classic” physical examinations, and novel insights into clinical and academic pediatric medicine related to every aspect of child health. Published monthly since 1932, The Journal of Pediatrics continues to promote the latest developments in pediatric medicine, child health, policy, and advocacy. Topics covered in The Journal of Pediatrics include, but are not limited to: General Pediatrics Pediatric Subspecialties Adolescent Medicine Allergy and Immunology Cardiology Critical Care Medicine Developmental-Behavioral Medicine Endocrinology Gastroenterology Hematology-Oncology Infectious Diseases Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine Nephrology Neurology Emergency Medicine Pulmonology Rheumatology Genetics Ethics Health Service Research Pediatric Hospitalist Medicine.
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