Understanding mechanisms that drive pain perception in early human development (360G-Wellcome-207457_Z_17_Z)

£1,953,181

Pain in infancy has negative long-term consequences and its prevention is a clinical priority, but adequate treatment requires mechanistic understanding of the structural and functional development of human nociceptive circuitry. Recent scientific and technological advances provide insights into how noxious information is transmitted to the infant brain, providing a platform to ask how intrinsic brain network connectivity and the environment affect noxious-evoked brain activity, behaviour and ultimately pain perception in the developing infant nervous system. The fellowship goal is to understand the mechanisms that drive and modulate pain perception in early human development. I will ask whether inherent differences in how the brain behaves at rest influence variability in noxious-evoked activity, and will determine how this relationship is altered by environmental factors and pathology. I will establish how the development of structural and functional network connectivity alters noxious-evoked brain activity, and influences the dynamic relationship between brain activity and behaviour. I will translate this mechanistic understanding into clinical practice by conducting a clinical trial of an analgesic (fentanyl) during a minor surgical procedure, and will establish whether our newly-developed measures of noxious-evoked brain activity are suitable for use in infant analgesic dose-finding studies.

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Grant Details

Amount Awarded 1953181
Applicant Surname Slater
Approval Committee Science Interview Panel
Award Date 2017-07-11T00:00:00+00:00
Financial Year 2016/17
Grant Programme: Title Senior Research Fellowship Basic
Internal ID 207457/Z/17/Z
Lead Applicant Prof Rebeccah Slater
Partnership Value 1953181
Planned Dates: End Date 2024-12-01T00:00:00+00:00
Planned Dates: Start Date 2017-12-01T00:00:00+00:00
Recipient Org: Country United Kingdom
Region South East
Sponsor(s) Prof Georg Holländer