Pain is a phenomenon so common that almost all individuals become familiar with
this sensation at some point in life. Some consider it as unavoidable and others as a
challenge that has to be defeated. During the second part of the last century researchers
became interested in the neurobiological source and regulation of pain, the use of
assessment instruments to “objectify” pain, and treatment options for distinct patient
groups and types of pain. Meanwhile we have become aware of the negative impact of
pain on quality of life, recovery from surgery and survival, as well as the risk of acute pain
turning into chronic pain.
Babies and intellectually disabled individuals of all ages have often been excluded from
pain studies; for long it was believed that they were unable to experience pain. For
infants and young children this belief was not specifically based on a scientific rationale
but more on a lack of knowledge about the status of the myelinisation process of the
nerves in neonates, the individual variability in drug disposition and fear of harmful
side effects of analgesics and narcotics. Intellectually disabled individuals have always
been considered to be unable to experience or suffer from pain. This misconception
was partly based on absence of visible emotion during potentially painful situations,
like continuing to walk with a broken hip or leg. Such observations seemed more
important than the knowledge that a condition is known to be (extremely) painful in
individuals that are not intellectually disabled.
Fortunately enough we have done away with these misconceptions. A landmark publication
of Anand and Hickey in 1987 reported huge circulatory and metabolic complications
in (prematurely born) neonates after ligation of a patent ductus arteriosus without
fentanyl compared to children that received fentanyl. Since then it was acknowledged
that babies are capable to feel pain and require treatment just like in older patients.
http://repub.eur.nl/res/pub/30681/111216_Boerlage%2C%20Anneke%20Aleida.pdf
http://repub.eur.nl/res/pub/30681/111216_Boerlage%2C%20Anneke%20Aleida.pdf
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