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Release Date: Oct. 18, 2004
CIRCUMCISED NEWBORNS RESPOND BEST TO ANESTHETIC RELIEF
By Aaron Levin, Science Writer
Health Behavior News Service
Anesthetics are effective
in reducing the pain of circumcision in newborns, judging from the baby’s
heart rate and time spent crying after the procedure, a new analysis finds.
A systematic review of
1,984 babies concludes that injectable or topical pain medicines significantly,
but not
totally, lower a baby’s heart rate and
reduce crying time — two expressions of pain. Giving oral pain relievers
or sugar solutions to the baby or playing comforting music had little apparent
effect on pain sensations, says lead author Barbara Brady-Fryer, R.N., the
Child Health Program at Stollery Children’s Hospital-Capital Health in
Edmonton, Alberta.
“None of the studied interventions completely eliminated the pain response
to circumcision,” Brady-Fryer says.
The review, which includes data from 35 separate randomized controlled studies,
appears in the October issue of the Cochrane Collaboration, an international
organization that evaluates medical research. Systematic reviews draw evidence-based
conclusions about medical practice after considering both the content and quality
of existing medical trials on a topic.
There are possible medical benefits to circumcision, says the American Academy
of Pediatrics, but they are not sufficient to recommend the procedure routinely
for all newborn boys. Parents who want their sons circumcised for religious,
cultural or personal reasons should talk to their physicians about anesthetics
that can lower pain and stress, the Academy says.
“When done without pain medicine, circumcision is painful,” says
an Academy policy statement. Researchers have found that circumcision pain
can increase the infant’s heart and breathing rates, decrease blood oxygen
levels, increase crying, cause skin flushing and vomiting, and alter sleep/wakes
states. It can also increase sensitivity to other painful procedures.
“Infants circumcised without anesthesia exhibit stronger pain responses
to routine immunizations during the first six months of life than infants who
were not circumcised,” Brady-Fryer says, citing one study.
The most effective method
for reducing pain of circumcision, according to Brady-Fryer’s review,
is the dorsal penile nerve block, using injections of the painkiller lidocaine.
Compared
to placebo, this technique improved pain
scores and blood oxygen levels, cut crying time by 54 percent and lowered average
heart rate by 30 beats per minute. Although the risks associated with dorsal
penile block are very low, a similar technique called a ring block, which also
uses lidocaine injections, may be as effective but easier and safer to use,
she says.
“In some centers, physicians may not be experienced in using penile
blocks, and in that case, anesthetic creams may be the best choice,” Brady-Fryer
says.
“The injections required for these procedures may themselves cause pain,
and any use of sedation or pain control carries some risk,” says Joseph
Cravero, M.D., a pediatrician and anesthesiologist at the Dartmouth Hitchcock
Medical Center in New Hampshire. “Practices vary from hospital to hospital,
but it’s pretty common to use some type of anesthetic today.”
Anesthetic creams also reduced heart rate and crying, although not as much
as the nerve block technique.
“In the U.S., the consensus among rabbis is that local anesthesia can
be used,” says Rabbi Moshe Tendler, Ph.D., a professor of medical ethics
and biology at Yeshiva University in New York, and chairman of the Bioethics
Commission of the Rabbinical Assembly of America, an organization of Orthodox
Jewish rabbis. “But doing a dorsal block usually requires a pediatric
urologist, so I recommend to mothers that they apply a 30 percent lidocaine
ointment an hour before the bris [circumcision ceremony] to lessen the pain.
It’s important that mothers know that it’s OK to use anesthesia.”
Few adverse effects were
associated with anesthetic blocks or creams, Brady-Fryer says, although each
required
some time after injection or application to reach
their full effect. Penile nerve blocks take five minutes, and the anesthetic
creams take at least 60 minutes before they’re effective. The creams
can also wash off if the infant urinates during this time. Those delays may
dissuade some physicians from using anesthetics.
“The time waiting for the drug to take effect is a concern for clinicians
because it increases the total time required for circumcision surgery,” she
says.
Alternative approaches
offered little help. Testing a sugar solution given by mouth produced only
modest and “inconsistent” results,
possibly due to variations in sugar concentration or dosage, Brady-Fryer
says.
Two trials compared the oral pain medicine acetaminophen to placebo. Only
one showed any effect and that was on a measure of mother-infant feeding interactions
after circumcision. Three trials reported that music or recordings of sounds
from within the womb showed little effect on heart rate, blood pressure, crying
or other measures.
While the review sorted out the relative advantages of these techniques, Brady-Fryer
says that weaknesses in the original trials must be considered as well. Many
of the trials enrolled small numbers of patients (80 or fewer in 32 of the
35 trials), while some did not describe the tools or techniques used for the
circumcision.
“None of the reports included in this review offered a definition of
pain, and in general, the reports did not differentiate between the painful
versus the distressing/stressful aspects of the circumcision procedure,” she
says.
However, that should not deter doctors from using anesthetics, she says.
“The results of this review show that dorsal penile nerve block and
ring block are the most effective, and that the topical anesthetics, although
less effective, can also be recommended over no treatment for attenuation of
circumcision pain,” Brady-Fryer says.
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