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Title: Absence of ventilatory responses to alternating breaths of mild hypoxia and air in infants who have had bronchopulmonary dysplasia: implications for the risk of sudden infant death. Author: Calder NA, Williams BA, Smyth J, Boon AW, Kumar P, Hanson MA. Journal: Pediatr Res; 1994 Jun; 35(6):677-81. PubMed ID: 7936817. Abstract: Infants who have had bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) are at an increased risk of sudden infant death syndrome. Because failure of the cardiorespiratory response to hypoxia is suggested to play a key role in sudden infant death syndrome, we tested the hypothesis that infants who have had BPD have a reduced respiratory chemoreflex response to hypoxia. We examined the reflex respiratory responses to breath-by-breath alternations in fractional inspired oxygen concentration in eight infants who had had BPD (mean gestation = 27 wk, mean postnatal age = 93 d) who were no longer on supplemental oxygen and compared the responses with those of 12 preterm infants who had not required supplemental oxygen or been mechanically ventilated since birth (mean gestation = 30 wk, mean postnatal age = 38 d). For test runs we alternated fractional inspired oxygen concentration through two gas delivery lines between 0.21 and 0.16 on a breath-by-breath basis, and for control runs we alternated the inspirate between the two gas lines with a fractional inspired oxygen concentration of 0.21 in each. Respiration was measured using inductance plethysmography infants with BPD showed no significant differences between test and control responses for any respiratory variable. In contrast, all respiratory variables in the preterm infants showed test responses significantly greater than control. We speculate that the "blunted" chemoreflex respiratory response seen in infants with BPD may predispose them to subsequent respiratory failure, but we do not known which component of the chemoreflex is impaired.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]