Unborn Babies Can Feel Pain in Womb, Study Suggests

By IB Times Staff Reporter: Subscribe to IB's

September 8, 2011 8:59 PM EDT

Unborn babies can make the distinction between pain and touch when they have been in the womb for 35 to 37 weeks, scientists suggest in a new study.

Scientists at the University College London in England measured the brain activity of 46 babies in the University College Hospital Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Wing, which offers maternity and neonatal services.

Share This Story

Search Senior Housing Facilities

Search senior housing facilities

Create a personal senior housing list with our search. Search Nursing Homes to find U.S. News-rated facilities. For other types of senior housing, you can access Seniors for Living's list of thousands of additional facilities.

Enter location
or
Selecting housing type

The scientists measured electrical brain activity while the babies underwent a standard procedure in which they have a blood sample collected from their heels.

"Premature babies who are younger than 35 weeks have similar brain responses when they experience touch or pain," research fellow Dr. Rebeccah Slater said in a UCL press release. "After this time there is a gradual change, rather than a sudden shift, when the brain starts to process the two types of stimuli in a distinct manner."

Twenty-one of the babies observed were born prematurely. Those babies had general bursts of electrical activity in the brain, while babies born full-term showed electrical activity in more localized parts of the brain. This suggested that the older babies were able to distinguish pain from touch while still in gestation.

Follow us

"Of course, babies cannot tell us how they feel, so it is impossible to know what babies actually experience," the paper's lead author Dr. Lorenzo Fabrizi said in the press release. "We cannot say that before this change in brain activity they don't feel pain."

Still, this study can help to understand how the human brain develops, Slater said.

"It is important to understand how the human brain develops so that we can provide the best clinical care for hospitalized infants," Slater said.

The study was published in the journal Current Biology.

This article is copyrighted by International Business Times, the business news leader
Sponsor Link:
Join the Conversation
Most popular
IBTimes TV

73 yr Old Becomes Oldest Woman to Climb Mount Everest

Global Markets
Existing Home Sales Jump, World Banks Lowers China Forecast, Euro Prepares for Greek Exit

E-Newsletters

We value your privacy. Your email address will not be shared.