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Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Dr Jubal John Paediatric Fellow Sep 2014 Outline • Epidemiology • Antenatal aspects of care in chemical dependent mothers • Substances and their effects • Pathophysiology and symptoms • Supportive care • Scoring and assessing severity • Pharmacological management • Breastfeeding • Discharge and ongoing care Key Points • Chemical dependence in the mother may cause • • • • neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) in newborn. NAS is more common in babies born to opioid dependent women. There is limited dose-response relationship between maternal opioid intake and NAS. Don’t administer naloxone to the baby at birth. Assessment of risk of harm or neglect to the baby should occur throughout the pregnancy and post-natally. • These babies are at an increased risk of harm and poor developmental outcomes due to a complex interplay of psychosocial and environmental factors. Principles • The care of the opioid-dependent pregnant woman from a drug and alcohol perspective based on "Harm Minimisation" principles. • The care of the newborn from a child protection perspective The numbers • 7.3 million (2 in 5) Australians have used illicit drugs, 3 million in the past year. • ~6% of newborns are affected by drug use (based on NSW survey data) • Estimated that 60-90% of mothers on methadone will have an infant affected by NAS During Pregnancy • All pregnant women should be screened for substance use during pregnancy. Often motivated to change. • Can have multiple associated problems: • obstetric - prematurity, growth restriction, fetal demise • medical - asthma, epilepsy, liver disease, coronary valve disease, blood-borne virus infection, nutritional deficiencies • neonatal - prematurity, growth restriction, neonatal withdrawal, sudden infant death • other psychiatric, social, legal domestic and financial problems • Statewide secondary consultation services are available from the Women's Alcohol and Drug Service (WADS) on (03) 8345 3931. Drug effects Other medications causing withdrawal • SSRI • tremor • restlessness • rigidity • myoclonus. Methadone substitution • Methadone substitution for heroin use in pregnancy results in: • improved fetal growth • improved survival • less risk of prematurity • Methadone stabilisation is recommended rather than dose reduction in pregnancy. Withdrawal from narcotics is not recommend • miscarriage in the first trimester • premature labour in the third trimester • fetal distress • death in-utero Withdrawal timeframes • 90% of infants will display symptoms within 96hours (4days) • But can occur past the second week postnatally. • Subacute symptoms can last 4-6months (assoc with cannabis, opiates, sedatives and tobacco) • variable muscle tone • agitation • sleep & feeding difficulties • Specific drugs: • Heroine – short half life, usually apparent in first 24hours • Methadone – 3-7 days • SSRI/SNRI – usually first 48 hours Pathophysiology • Activation of opiate receptors in locus ceruleus • Decreases NE and Dopamine release • With prolonged exposure • Upregulate NE and Dopamine receptors • At Birth • Remove inhibition = Noradernergic Overcharge Symptoms Supportive care • First line of management • quiet setting • breastfeeding • use of a pacifier (if parents give consent) • small frequent feeds • cuddling • swaddling • close skin contact Scoring • Finnegan scoring • Severity • Response to tx Pharmacotherapy • Morphine • Opioid dependent mother • Babies need apnoea monitor • Overdosing: abdominal distention, constipation and respiratory depression • Phenobarbitone • Used concurrently when morphine not adequate • Non-opioid (esp benzodiazepine) or unknown maternal drugs Morphine • Decrease dose interval before increasing total dose. • Once abstinence has been controlled (three consecutive scores less than 8) the following should be implemented: • maintain control for 72 hours • initiate the detoxification process by decreasing the total daily dose by 10% of maximum dose every 48-72 hours • when dosage levels reach 0.10 -0.12mg/kg/day - maintain this dose for 72 hours prior to ceasing all medication • when oral morphine treatment is discontinued, NAS scoring should continue for a further 72 hours Morphine • Give the morphine before the feed. If baby has a large vomit after being given morphine: • Re-dose if vomits within 10 minutes of dose, • Give half dose if vomits between10 - 30 minutes after dose, • Do not give further morphine if baby vomits more than 30 minutes after feed, (always err on side of caution) • Ensure baby is not overfed Phenobarbitone • Once NAS symptoms have been assessed as controlled (three consecutive scores less than 8) for 48 hours, then phenobarbitone dose should be reduced by 2mg per dose every 4th day or longer until less than 2mg/kg/day, depending on paediatric assessment of clinical condition. Breastfeeding • Generally encouraged but contraindicated in: • HIV, or Hep C with bleeding nipples • Safe to breastfeed on methadone Discharge • Feeding and growing • Completed period of monitoring and there are no signs of continuing significant withdrawal. There is a significant risk of unsupervised withdrawal occurring at home if infants are discharged earlier than 7 days, particularly if mother is on methadone. • The infant requiring medical therapy for withdrawal has been off all medication for at least 72 hours. • Safe home: Any child protection issues and significant parental issues (eg suitable accommodation) have been appropriately addressed. • The infant should have early medical follow up (within 2 weeks of discharge) and have early and regular review by domiciliary/maternal and child health nurses. Continuing care References/Useful resources • Royal Womens’ Hospital neonatal handbook • Neontal eHandbook: http://www.health.vic.gov.au/neonatalhandbook/conditions/infant-chemicallydependent-mother.htm • http://speciosum.curtin.edu.au/local/docs/nas/NAS_LitReview.pdf • http://www.health.qld.gov.au/qcg/documents/g_nas5-0.pdf • http://www0.health.nsw.gov.au/policies/gl/2013/pdf/GL2013_008.pdf