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Neonatal neurobehavior effects following buprenorphine versus methadone exposure.

Authors :
Coyle, Mara G.
Salisbury, Amy L.
Lester, Barry M.
Jones, Hendrée E.
Lin, Hai
Graf‐Rohrmeister, Klaudia
Fischer, Gabriele
Source :
Addiction; Nov2012 Supplement, p63-73, 11p, 5 Charts, 2 Graphs
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Aim To determine the effects of in utero exposure to methadone or buprenorphine on infant neurobehavior. Design Three sites from the Maternal Opioid Treatment: Human Experimental Research ( MOTHER) study, a double-blind, double-dummy, randomized clinical trial participated in this substudy. Setting Medical Centers that provided comprehensive maternal care to opioid-dependent pregnant women in Baltimore, MD, Providence, RI and Vienna, Austria. Participants Thirty-nine full-term infants. Measurements The Neonatal Intensive Care Unit ( NICU) Network Neurobehavioral Scale ( NNNS) was administered to a subgroup of infants on postpartum days 3, 5, 7, 10, 14-15 and 28-30. Findings While neurobehavior improved for both medication conditions over time, infants exposed in utero to buprenorphine exhibited fewer stress-abstinence signs ( P < 0.001), were less excitable ( P < 0.001) and less over-aroused ( P < 0.01), exhibited less hypertonia ( P < 0.007), had better self-regulation ( P < 0.04) and required less handling ( P < 0.001) to maintain a quiet alert state relative to in utero methadone-exposed infants. Infants who were older when they began morphine treatment for withdrawal had higher self-regulation scores ( P < 0.01), and demonstrated the least amount of excitability ( P < 0.02) and hypertonia ( P < 0.02) on average. Quality of movement was correlated negatively with peak NAS score ( P < 0.01), number of days treated with morphine for NAS ( P < 0.01) and total amount of morphine received ( P < 0.03). Excitability scores were related positively to total morphine dose ( P < 0.03). Conclusion While neurobehavior improves during the first month of postnatal life for in utero agonist medication-exposed neonates, buprenorphine exposure results in superior neurobehavioral scores and less severe withdrawal than does methadone exposure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09652140
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Addiction
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
82891931
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1360-0443.2012.04040.x