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Relationship between pre‐incision Pupillary Pain Index and post‐incision heart rate and pupillary diameter variation in children
Author(s) -
Sabourdin Nada,
Del Bove Loïc,
Louvet Nicolas,
LuzonChetrit Sarah,
Tavernier Benoît,
Constant Isabelle
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
pediatric anesthesia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.704
H-Index - 82
eISSN - 1460-9592
pISSN - 1155-5645
DOI - 10.1111/pan.14253
Subject(s) - medicine , pupillometry , schmidt sting pain index , heart rate , anesthesia , pupil , pupillary response , pupillary reflex , heart rate variability , prospective cohort study , surgery , blood pressure , reflex , neuroscience , biology
Abstract Background The Pupillary Pain Index is a recent pupillometric index designed to assess the level of analgesia under general anesthesia in children and adults. If analgesia is inadequate, acute nociceptive stimuli such as skin incision may induce significant hemodynamic disturbances. Aims Our aim was to investigate the potential relationship between pre‐incision Pupillary Pain Index and heart rate increase following skin incision in children. Methods This was a prospective, non‐randomized, registered pilot study. We included children undergoing surgery under general anesthesia. Pupillary Pain Index was assessed 2 min before skin incision. Then, heart rate maximal variation (Δ HR ) and pupillary diameter maximal variation (Δ PD ) in the minute following incision were recorded. Spearman coefficient was calculated to characterize the relationship between Pupillary Pain Index and Δ HR or Δ PD . Using receiver operating characteristic curve analysis, we also studied the predictive value of pre‐incision Pupillary Pain Index for heart rate and pupillary diameter reactivity. Results 53 patients were included (10 ± 4 years, 40 ± 19 kg). There was a modest correlation between pre‐incision Pupillary Pain Index and Δ HR (Spearman rs = 0.35 [0.05–0.57], p  = .011), and between pre‐incision Pupillary Pain Index and Δ PD (Spearman rs = 0.54 [0.33–0.71], p  < .001). Regarding the predictive value of Pupillary Pain Index for heart rate or pupillary diameter reactivity, the corresponding areas under the receiver operating characteristic curves were 0.90 [0.82–0.99] and 0.78 [0.65–0.93], respectively. A threshold of Pupillary Pain Index <3 predicted the absence of heart rate reactivity at incision with a good performance (negative predictive value = 1). Conclusions In children, pre‐incision Pupillary Pain Index was moderately correlated with post‐incision nociception. Pre‐incision Pupillary Pain Index had good predictive performances for heart rate or pupillary diameter reactivity to skin incision. Pre‐incision Pupillary Pain Index <3 might predict the absence of heart rate reaction to incision.

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