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Title: Diaphragmatic activity and ventilation in preterm infants. I. The effects of sleep state. Author: Reis FJ, Cates DB, Landriault LV, Rigatto H. Journal: Biol Neonate; 1994; 65(1):16-24. PubMed ID: 8117841. Abstract: To determine the effects of sleep on diaphragmatic activity and ventilation we studied 10 preterm infants (birth weight 1,840 +/- 50 g, gestational age 33 +/- 0.6 weeks, and postnatal age 9.4 +/- 1.4 days). We measured surface and esophageal diaphragmatic electromyograms (EMGdi). Ventilation was measured using a nasal flowmeter and a flow-through system. Diaphragmatic activity was analyzed for total phasic activity, expiratory phasic activity, the expiratory to total phasic activity ratio, and the presence of 'tonic' activity. The latter was defined by the presence of electrical activity and the end of expiration. There was a decrease in the average total phasic activity (1.25 vs. 0.71 s, p = 0.001), expiratory phasic activity (0.67 vs. 0.21 s, p = 0.002), the expiratory to total phasic activity ratio (0.51:0.27 s, p = 0.001) and tonic activity (51 to 5%, p = 0.01) from quiet to REM sleep in the surface EMGdi. Similar changes were found in the esophageal EMGdi, except that tonic activity was rarely observed. In parallel with these changes in electrical activity of the diaphragm, minute ventilation and alveolar ventilation increased from quiet to REM sleep. This increase was primarily related to an increase in frequency with a negligible change in tidal volume. The increase in frequency was primarily due to shortening of inspiratory time. The findings that tonic activity recorded via surface electrodes decreased substantially from quiet to REM sleep and was not observed in the esophageal EMGdi suggests that this tonic activity may represent electrical activity of the postural muscles of the chest wall rather than the diaphragm.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]