Lower plasma melatonin levels in non‑hypoxic premature newborns associated with neonatal pain
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Sánchez Borja, Cristina; Cristóbal‑Cañadas, Delia; Rodríguez Lucenilla, María Isabel; Muñoz Hoyos, Antonio; Agil Abdalla, Mhmad Ahmad; Vázquez‑López, María Ángeles; Parrón Carreño, Tesifón; Nievas‑Soriano, Bruno José; Bonillo‑Perales, Antonio; Bonillo‑Perales, Juan CarlosEditorial
Springer
Materia
Melatonin Oxidative stress Free radicals
Fecha
2024-06-06Referencia bibliográfica
Sánchez Borja, C. et. al. Eur J Pediatr 183, 3607–3615 (2024). [https://doi.org/10.1007/s00431-024-05632-1]
Patrocinador
open access publishing: Universidad de Almería/ CBUAResumen
We analyzed plasma melatonin levels in different groups of preterm newborns without hypoxia and their relationship with
several perinatal variables like gestational age or neonatal pain. Prospective cohort study of preterm newborns (PTNB)
without perinatal hypoxia, Apgar > 6 at 5 min, and oxygen needs on the third day of life. We compared melatonin levels at
day 3 of life in different groups of non-hypoxic preterm infants (Student’s t-tests, Mann-Whitney U, and chi2)
and analyzed
the relationship of melatonin with GA, birth weight, neonatal pain (Premature Infant Pain Profile (PIPP) scale), caffeine
treatment, parenteral nutrition, or the development of free radical diseases (correlation study, linear regression) and factors
associated with moderate/intense pain and free radical diseases (logistic regression analysis). Sixty-one preterm infants with
gestational age (GA) of 30.7 ± 2.0 weeks with no oxygen requirements at day 3 of life were studied with plasma melatonin
levels of 33.8 ± 12.01 pg/ml. Preterm infants weighing < 1250 g at birth had lower plasma melatonin levels (p = 0.05).
Preterm infants with moderate or severe pain (PPIPP > 5) have lower melatonin levels (p = 0.01), and being preterm with
PIPP > 5 is associated with lower plasma melatonin levels (p = 0.03). Being very preterm (GA < 32 GS), having low weight
for gestational age (LWGA), receiving caffeine treatment, or requiring parenteral nutrition did not modify melatonin levels
in non-hypoxic preterm infants (p = NS). Melatonin on day 3 of life in non-hypoxic preterm infants is not associated with
later development of free radical diseases (BPD, sepsis, ROP, HIV, NEC).
Conclusion: We observed that preterm infants with moderate to severe pain have lower melatonin levels. These findings
are relevant because they reinforce the findings of other authors that melatonin supplementation decreases pain and oxidative
stress in painful procedures in premature infants. Further studies are needed to evaluate whether melatonin could be used as
an analgesic in painful procedures in preterm infants.
Trial registration: Trial registration was not required since this was an observational study.





