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Establishing a standardised approach for the measurement of neonatal noxious-evoked brain activity in response to an acute somatic nociceptive heel lance stimulus.

Marianne AspburyRoshni C MansfieldLuke BaxterAomesh BhattMaria M CoboSean P FitzgibbonCaroline HartleyAnnalisa HauckSimon MarchantVaneesha MonkKirubin PillayRavi PoorunMarianne van der VaartRebeccah Slater
Published in: Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior (2024)
We have reproduced in independent datasets the findings that the n-NRF response to a noxious stimulus is significantly greater than to a non-noxious stimulus, and that the noxious-evoked EEG response increases with PMA. The pre-defined equivalence bounds for the mean magnitude of the EEG response were not met, though this might be due to either inter-site differences such as the lack of calibration of devices between sites (a true negative) or underpowering (a false negative). This reproducibility study provides robust evidence that supports the use of the n-NRF as an objective outcome for clinical trials assessing acute nociception in neonates. Use of the n-NRF in this way has the potential to transform the way analgesic efficacy studies are performed.
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