Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Many pain assessment tools for preschool and school-aged children are based on facial expressions of pain. Despite broad use, their metrics are not rooted in the anatomic display of the facial pain expression. We aim to describe quantitatively the patterns of initiation and maintenance of the infant pain expression across an expressive cycle. We evaluated the trajectory of the pain expression of three newborns with the most intense facial display among 63 infants receiving a painful stimulus. A modified “point-pair ” system was used to measure movement in key areas across the face by analyzing stil...
Pain behavior of neonates was compared across sleep/waking states and sex. From Gate-Control Theory ...
BACKGROUND: Pain in infancy is poorly understood, and medical staff often have difficulty assessing ...
Background Neonatal pain assessment generally requires access to facial expression. Improved neonato...
BACKGROUND: Facial expression is widely used to judge pain in neonates. However, little is known abo...
BACKGROUND: Facial expression is widely used to judge pain in neonates. However, little is known abo...
The primal face of pain (PFP) is postulated to be a common and universal facial expression to pain, ...
The primal face of pain (PEP) is postulated to be a common and universal facial expression to pain, ...
Facial activity is strikingly visible in infants reacting to noxious events. Two measures that reduc...
The purpose of the study was to examine the role of the negative emotionality dimension of temperam...
Pain assessment is of high priority in the clinical setting. Facial Pain Scales (FPSs) are pain asse...
All healthy human beings feel pain and they express it in different ways. Some researchers elaborate...
Infants’ early exposure to painful procedures can have negative short and long-term effects on...
Pain expression in neonates instigated by heel-lance for blood sampling purposes was systematically ...
For over two decades, researchers have studied the expression of pain in young infants to unlock the...
Abstract The accurate assessment of infants\u27 pain is important for understanding their medical co...
Pain behavior of neonates was compared across sleep/waking states and sex. From Gate-Control Theory ...
BACKGROUND: Pain in infancy is poorly understood, and medical staff often have difficulty assessing ...
Background Neonatal pain assessment generally requires access to facial expression. Improved neonato...
BACKGROUND: Facial expression is widely used to judge pain in neonates. However, little is known abo...
BACKGROUND: Facial expression is widely used to judge pain in neonates. However, little is known abo...
The primal face of pain (PFP) is postulated to be a common and universal facial expression to pain, ...
The primal face of pain (PEP) is postulated to be a common and universal facial expression to pain, ...
Facial activity is strikingly visible in infants reacting to noxious events. Two measures that reduc...
The purpose of the study was to examine the role of the negative emotionality dimension of temperam...
Pain assessment is of high priority in the clinical setting. Facial Pain Scales (FPSs) are pain asse...
All healthy human beings feel pain and they express it in different ways. Some researchers elaborate...
Infants’ early exposure to painful procedures can have negative short and long-term effects on...
Pain expression in neonates instigated by heel-lance for blood sampling purposes was systematically ...
For over two decades, researchers have studied the expression of pain in young infants to unlock the...
Abstract The accurate assessment of infants\u27 pain is important for understanding their medical co...
Pain behavior of neonates was compared across sleep/waking states and sex. From Gate-Control Theory ...
BACKGROUND: Pain in infancy is poorly understood, and medical staff often have difficulty assessing ...
Background Neonatal pain assessment generally requires access to facial expression. Improved neonato...