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1.
To investigate the relationship between central respiratory pauses and heart rate, we performed polygraphic recordings in 23 normal newborns (35 to 41 weeks conceptional age). We monitored the electroencephalogram, rapid eye movements, movements of the upper and lower limbs, chin and diaphragmatic electromyogram, electrocardiogram, thoracic and abdominal respiratory movements, air flow and transcutaneous PO2. Heart rate changes were analysed by computer measurement of R-R intervals and by cardiotachography. Respiratory pauses occurring after body movements and those not preceded by movements were studied separately. We analysed 1128 respiratory pauses greater than 3 s duration. No respiratory pause lasted more than 12 s. Independently of age, sleep state and respiratory pause duration, heart rate was significantly lower at the onset of respiratory pause, compared to control periods (selected away from the pause: 10 s before its onset and 20 s after its end). Heart rate slowed still further through the respiratory pause and reverted toward the baseline level after its end. When no movements preceded the respiratory pause, heart rate just before the pause was lower compared to control periods. These findings suggest the existence of simultaneous central commands responsible for both respiratory pause and heart rate deceleration.  相似文献   

2.
Because successive rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep periods in the night are longer in duration and have more phasic events, ventilation during late REM sleep might be more affected than in earlier episodes. Despite the increase in eye movement density (EMD) in late REM sleep, average minute ventilation was, however, not reduced compared with that in early REM sleep. Decreases in rib cage motion (mean inspiratory flow of the rib cage) in association with increasing EMD were offset by increments in respiratory frequency. Apart from expiratory time, there were no significant changes in the slopes of the relationships between EMD and specific ventilatory components, from early to late REM sleep periods. However, there was an increase in the number of episodes when ventilation was reduced during late REM sleep. Changes in ventilatory pattern during late REM sleep are due to changes in the underlying nature of REM sleep. The ventilatory response during eye movements is, however, subject specific. Some subjects exhibit large decrements in mean inspiratory flow of the rib cage and increments in respiratory frequency during bursts of eye movement, whereas other individuals demonstrate only small changes in these ventilatory parameters.  相似文献   

3.
We used single-breath mechanical loads and airway occlusions in premature infants to determine whether maturation influences the reflex control of inspiratory duration. We measured flow, volume, airway pressure, and surface diaphragmatic electromyogram (EMG) in 10 healthy preterm infants [33 +/- 1 (SD) wk gestation], 2-7 days of age. Three resistive and two elastic loads and occlusions were applied to the inspiratory outlet of a two-way respiratory valve. Application of all loads resulted in inspired volumes significantly decreased from control (P less than 0.001), and these decreases were progressive with increasing loads. Inspiratory duration (TI) was prolonged from control by all loads and occlusions when measured from the diaphragmatic EMG (neural TI) and by all but the smaller elastic load when measured from the flow tracing (mechanical TI). Similar decreases in inspired volume at the end of neural TI produced by application of both elastic and resistive loads resulted in comparable prolongation of neural TI. In contrast, for comparable volume decrements, resistive loading prolonged mechanical TI more than elastic loading (P less than 0.001). Mechanical and neural TI values of the breath after the loaded breath were unchanged from control values. Comparison of the neural volume-timing relationship in premature infants with our data in full-term infants suggests that the strength of the timing response to similar relative decrements in inspired volume is comparable. We conclude that reflex control of neural TI in premature infants depends on the magnitude of inspired volume and is independent of the volume trajectory.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Deep inspirations (sighs) play a significant role in altering lung mechanical and airway wall function; however, their role in respiratory control remains unclear. We examined whether sighs act via a resetting mechanism to improve control of the respiratory regulatory system. Effects of sighs on system variability, short- and long-range memory, and stability were assessed in 25 healthy full-term infants at 1 mo of age [mean 36 (range 28-57) days] during quiet sleep. Variability was examined using moving-window coefficient of variation, short-range memory using autocorrelation function, and long-range memory using detrended fluctuation analysis. Stability was examined by studying the behavior of the attractor with use of phase-space plots. Variability of tidal volume (VT) and minute ventilation (VE) increased during the initial 15 breaths after a sigh. Short-range memory of VT decreased during the 50 breaths preceding a sigh, becoming uncorrelated (random) during the 10-breath presigh window. Short-range memory increased after a sigh for the entire 50 breaths compared with the randomized data set and for 20 breaths compared with the presigh window. Similar, but shorter duration, changes were noted in VE. No change in long-range memory was seen after a sigh. Coefficient of variation and range of points located within a defined attractor segment increased after a sigh. Thus control of breathing in healthy infants shows long-range stability and improvement in short-range memory and variability after a sigh. These results add new evidence that the role of sighs is not purely mechanical.  相似文献   

5.
In animals and human adults, upper airway muscle activity usually precedes inspiratory diaphragm activity. We examined the interaction of the posterior cricoarytenoid muscle (PCA), which abducts the larynx, and the diaphragm (DIA) in the control of airflow in newborn infants to assess the effect of maturation on respiratory muscle sequence. We recorded tidal volume, airflow, and DIA and PCA electromyograms (EMG) in 12 full-term, 14 premature, and 10 premature infants with apnea treated with aminophylline. In most breaths, onset of PCA EMG activity preceded onset of DIA EMG activity (lead breaths). In all subjects, we also observed breaths (range 6-61%) in which PCA EMG onset followed DIA EMG onset (lag breaths). DIA neural inspiratory duration and the neuromechanical delay between DIA EMG onset and inspiratory flow were longer in lag than in lead breaths (P < 0.05 and P < 0.01, respectively). The frequency of lag breaths was greater in the premature infants [33 +/- 4% (SE)] than in either the full-term infants (21 +/- 3%, P < 0.03) or the premature infants with apnea treated with aminophylline (16 +/- 2%, P < 0.01). We conclude that the expected sequence of onset of PCA and DIA EMG activity is frequently disrupted in newborn infants. Both maturation and respiratory stimulation with aminophylline improve the coordination of the PCA and DIA.  相似文献   

6.
Circadian patterns have been observed in infants as early as the first few postnatal days. We hypothesized that, in each sleep-waking state, heart rate variation in several distinct frequency bands would show consistent variations across a night in newborn infants. Twelve-hour night-time recordings of EEG, ECG, EOG, digastric EMG, respiratory movements, and CO2 were obtained from 25 normal full-term infants at 2-7 days postnatal age. The extents of three types of heart rate variation were determined for all epochs identified as quiet sleep, rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, and waking during each 4-hr period of the night. In particular states, the extent of all three types of heart rate variation decreased from the evening (7-11pm) to the late night (11pm-3am). Heart rate variation at the respiratory frequency showed such a time-of-night effect in quiet sleep only, resulting in a significant sleep state effect on respiratory sinus arrhythmia during the evening that disappeared later in the night. Previous studies have indicated that respiratory sinus arrhythmia is enhanced during quiet sleep, relative to other states, after 3 mo of age; the present findings suggest that the tendency for enhancement during quiet sleep is present even in the neonate, although this tendency is only expressed during the evening. Results indicate that time-of-night effects on heart rate variation are not constant across physiological states in neonates, and heart rate variation during the waking state is particularly unresponsive to these time-of-night influences.  相似文献   

7.
Regulation of end-expiratory lung volume during sleep in premature infants   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
To investigate the regulation of end-expiratory lung volume (EEV) in premature infants, we recorded airflow, tidal volume, diaphragm electromyogram (EMG), and chest wall displacement during sleep. In quiet sleep, EEV during breathing was 10.8 +/- 3.6 (SD) ml greater than the minimum volume reached during unobstructed apneas. In active sleep, no decrease in EEV was observed during 28 of 35 unobstructed apneas. Breaths during quiet sleep had a variable extent of expiratory airflow retardation (braking), and inspiratory interruption occurred at substantial expiratory flow rates. During active sleep, the expiratory flow-volume curve was nearly linear, proceeding nearly to the volume axis at zero flow, and diaphragm EMG activity terminated near the peak of mechanical inspiration. Expiratory duration (TE) and inspiratory duration (TI) were significantly shortened in quiet sleep vs. active sleep although tidal volume was not significantly different. In quiet sleep, diaphragmatic braking activity and shortened TE combined to maintain EEV during breathing substantially above relaxation volume. In active sleep, reduced expiratory braking and prolongation of TE resulted in an EEV that was close to relaxation volume. We conclude that breathing strategy to regulate EEV in premature infants appears to be strongly influenced by sleep state.  相似文献   

8.
Several investigators have observed that irregular breathing occurs during rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep in healthy subjects, with ventilatory suppression being prominent during active eye movements [phasic REM (PREM) sleep] as opposed to tonic REM (TREM) sleep, when ocular activity is absent and ventilation more regular. Inasmuch as considerable data suggest that rapid eye movements are a manifestation of sleep-induced neural events that may importantly influence respiratory neurons, we hypothesized that upper airway dilator muscle activation may also be suppressed during periods of active eye movements in REM sleep. We studied six normal men during single nocturnal sleep studies. Standard sleep-staging parameters, ventilation, and genioglossus and alae nasi electromyograms (EMG) were continuously recorded during the study. There were no significant differences in minute ventilation, tidal volume, or any index of genioglossus or alae nasi EMG amplitude between non-REM (NREM) and REM sleep, when REM was analyzed as a single sleep stage. Each breath during REM sleep was scored as "phasic" or "tonic," depending on its proximity to REM deflections on the electrooculogram. Comparison of all three sleep states (NREM, PREM, and TREM) revealed that peak inspiratory genioglossus and alae nasi EMG activities were significantly decreased during PREM sleep compared with TREM sleep [genioglossus (arbitrary units): NREM 49 +/- 12 (mean +/- SE), TREM 49 +/- 5, PREM 20 +/- 5 (P less than 0.05, PREM different from TREM and NREM); alae nasi: NREM 16 +/- 4, TREM 38 +/- 7, PREM 10 +/- 4 (P less than 0.05, PREM different from TREM)]. We also observed, as have others, that ventilation, tidal volume, and mean inspiratory airflow were significantly decreased and respiratory frequency was increased during PREM sleep compared with both TREM and NREM sleep. We conclude that hypoventilation occurs in concert with reduced upper airway dilator muscle activation during PREM sleep by mechanisms that remain to be established.  相似文献   

9.
Simultaneous recordings of the diaphragmatic electromyogram (EMG) were made from two separate regions of the costal diaphragm in six normal cats. The diaphragmatic activities were always synchronous and the amplitudes and rates of rise were similar during slow-wave sleep. In contrast, during natural rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep, different activity was often present in the two leads. These differences were in the time of onset and offset, as well as in the amplitude and spike patterns, and occurred in approximately 5-20% of the diaphragmatic bursts averaged over the entire REM sleep period. With respect to eye movement density, the rate of differential activation was higher during periods of high density (26%) than in the absence of eye movements (1%) in the four animals for which these data were available. Differential activation of portions of the costal diaphragm is apparently a normal event of REM sleep. This could result from descending state-specific phasic neuronal activity that bypasses the medullary respiratory generator. Differential activation of portions of the diaphragm could contribute to disordered ventilation during REM sleep.  相似文献   

10.
To study respiratory timing mechanisms in patients with occlusive apnea, inspiratory and expiratory times (TI and TE) were calculated from the diaphragmatic electromyogram obtained in seven patients during non-rapid-eye-movement (NREM) sleep. Peak diaphragmatic activity (EMGdi) had a curvilinear relationship with TI during the ventilatory and occlusive phases such that TI shortened as EMGdi decreased during the ventilatory phase (r = 0.87, P less than 0.05) and it prolonged as EMGdi increased during the occlusive phase (r = 0.89, P less than 0.02). However, EMGdi vs. TI for the occlusive phase was shifted to the right of that for the ventilatory phase, reflecting the relatively longer TI during upper airway occlusion. TI also had a linear relationship with pleural pressure (r = 0.94, P less than 0.001) that remained unchanged during the ventilatory and occlusive phases such that it prolonged as negative inspiratory pressure increased. These results indicate that respiratory timing is continuously modified in patients with occlusive apnea as inspiratory neural drive fluctuates during NREM sleep and suggest that this modification is due to the net effects of changing inspiratory neural drive and afferent input predominantly from upper airway mechanoreceptors.  相似文献   

11.
This study was designed to determine the effects of a mild increase in body temperature within the physiological range (0.8 degrees C) in healthy premature infants. Seven unsedated premature infants (38.4 wk +/- 1.5 postconceptional age) were monitored polygraphically during "morning naps" in an incubator under two different environmental temperatures: (1) normothermia with the incubator temperature set at 25 degrees C and the rectal temperature equal to 36.9 degrees C +/- 0.1; (2) hyperthermia with the incubator temperature set at 35 degrees C and the rectal temperature equal to 37.7 degrees C +/- 0.15. Respiratory frequency and heart rate, respiratory events, i.e., central and obstructive apnea, and periodic breathing with and without apneic oscillations were tabulated. Results for respiratory events were expressed as (1) indices of the total number of respiratory events, and of specific respiratory events per hour of total, quiet and active sleep times; (2) duration of total and specific respiratory events expressed as a percentage of total sleep, quiet and active sleep times. Respiratory frequency and heart rate were significantly increased by hyperthermia (P less than 0.05). Hyperthermia did not significantly modify the indices or the duration of central and obstructive apnea. But the indices and the duration of periodic breathing with and without apneic oscillations were significantly increased by hyperthermia during active sleep (P less than 0.05) but not during quiet sleep. The present study shows that a mild increase in body temperature within the physiological range in premature infants enhances the instability of the breathing pattern during active sleep.  相似文献   

12.
To determine upper airway and respiratory muscle responses to nasal continuous negative airway pressure (CNAP), we quantitated the changes in diaphragmatic and genioglossal electromyographic activity, inspiratory duration, tidal volume, minute ventilation, and end-expiratory lung volume (EEL) during CNAP in six normal subjects during wakefulness and five during sleep. During wakefulness, CNAP resulted in immediate increases in electromyographic diaphragmatic and genioglossal muscle activity, and inspiratory duration, preserved or increased tidal volume and minute ventilation, and decreased EEL. During non-rapid-eye-movement and rapid-eye-movement sleep, CNAP was associated with no immediate muscle or timing responses, incomplete or complete upper airway occlusion, and decreased EEL. Progressive diaphragmatic and genioglossal responses were observed during non-rapid-eye-movement sleep in association with arterial O2 desaturation, but airway patency was not reestablished until further increases occurred with arousal. These results indicate that normal subjects, while awake, can fully compensate for CNAP by increasing respiratory and upper airway muscle activities but are unable to do so during sleep in the absence of arousal. This sleep-induced failure of load compensation predisposes the airways to collapse under conditions which threaten airway patency during sleep. The abrupt electromyogram responses seen during wakefulness and arousal are indicative of the importance of state effects, whereas the gradual increases seen during sleep probably reflect responses to changing blood gas composition.  相似文献   

13.
Chest wall distortion (inward motion of the rib cage on inspiration) has been found recently to reduce the tidal volume during active sleep in the neonatal period. To determine some of the factors that relate to the chest wall distortion and the decreased tidal volume seen in active sleep, a quantification of the phase differences between the movements of the chest wall and those of the abdominal wall, and of the relation of their phase differences to tidal volume was performed on data obtained before and during carbon dioxide stimulation in 15 newborn infants sleeping in the prone position. In quiet sleep, the breathing movements were congruent and regular, and the tidal volume and the mean inspiratory flow increased during carbon dioxide stimulation. In active sleep during exposure to carbon dioxide, the chest wall distortion decreased, the breathing movements were incongruent and the degree of the chest wall distortion was negatively correlated with the tidal volume, while the tidal volume and the mean inspiratory flow was increased. Chest wall distortion did not appear in quiet sleep and was decreased in active sleep in spite of increased ventilation during CO2 stimulation. This study favours the idea that chest wall distortion is caused by a well regulated change in neuromuscular activity and not by the strength of diaphragmatic movements overcoming the mechanical stability of the rib cage.  相似文献   

14.
Comparison of the abdominal muscle response to CO2 rebreathing in rapid-eye-movement (REM) and non-REM (NREM) sleep was performed in healthy premature infants near full term. Eight subjects were studied at a postconceptional age of 40 +/- 1.6 (SD) wk (range 38-43 wk) during spontaneous sleep. Sleep stages were defined on the basis of electrophysiological and behavioral criteria, and diaphragmatic and abdominal muscle electromyographic activity was recorded by cutaneous electrodes. The responses to CO2 were measured by a modified Read rebreathing technique. The minute ventilation and diaphragmatic and abdominal muscle electromyographic activities were calculated and plotted against end-tidal CO2 partial pressure. Both the ventilatory and diaphragmatic muscle responses to CO2 decreased from NREM to REM sleep (P less than 0.05). Abdominal muscles were forcefully recruited in response to CO2 rebreathing during NREM sleep. In REM sleep, abdominal muscle response to CO2 was virtually absent or decreased compared with NREM sleep (P less than 0.05). We conclude that 1) the abdominal muscles are recruited during NREM sleep in response to CO2 rebreathing in healthy premature infants near full term and 2) the abdominal muscle recruitment is inhibited during REM sleep compared with NREM sleep, and this REM sleep-related inhibition probably contributes to the decrease in the ventilatory response to CO2 rebreathing in REM sleep.  相似文献   

15.
Chest wall motion of infants during spinal anesthesia   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
To test the extent to which diaphragmatic contraction moves the rib cage in awake supine infants during quiet breathing, we studied chest wall motion in seven prematurely born infants before and during spinal anesthesia for inguinal hernia repair. Infants were studied at or around term (postconceptional age 43 +/- 8 wk). Spinal anesthesia produced a sensory block at the T2-T4 level, with concomitant motor block at a slightly lower level. This resulted in the loss of most intercostal muscle activity, whereas diaphragmatic function was preserved. Rib cage and abdominal displacements were measured with respiratory inductance plethysmography before and during spinal anesthesia. During the anesthetic, outward inspiratory rib cage motion decreased in six infants (P less than 0.02, paired t test); four of these developed paradoxical inward movement of the rib cage during inspiration. One infant, the most immature in the group, had inward movement of the rib cage both before and during the anesthetic. Abdominal displacements increased during spinal anesthesia in six of seven infants (P less than 0.05), suggesting an increase in diaphragmatic motion. We conclude that, in the group of infants studied, outward rib cage movement during awake tidal breathing requires active, coordinated intercostal muscle activity that is suppressed by spinal anesthesia.  相似文献   

16.
Eight patients with occlusive sleep apnea were monitored during non-rapid-eye-movement (NREM) sleep to study the factors that contribute to negative inspiratory pressure generation and thus upper airway occlusion. End-expiratory lung volume assessed by respiratory inductive plethysmography [sum of end-expiratory levels (SUM EEL)] increased early and decreased late during the ventilatory phases (P less than 0.0001, one-way analysis of variance). Inspiratory change in esophageal pressure (Pes) and peak inspiratory diaphragmatic and genioglossal electromyograms (EMGdi and EMGge) decreased while the inspiratory pressure generated for a given diaphragmatic activity (Pes/EMGdi) increased during the preapneic phase (P less than 0.0001, for all). Multiple regression analysis with Pes/EMGdi as the dependent variable (R2 = 0.90) indicated that both the changes in SUM EEL and EMGge significantly contributed to the model (P less than 0.008 and 0.004, respectively). These results indicate that end-expiratory lung volume fluctuates during NREM sleep in patients with occlusive apnea and suggest that these changes along with the changes in upper airway muscle activity contribute to the generation of negative inspiratory pressure, leading to the passive collapse of the upper airways.  相似文献   

17.

In four of six subjects with narcolepsy, multiple sleep latency tests-examined disconjugated binocular eye movements were observed in the very beginning of multiple sleep latency test recordings. The eye movements appeared before disappearance of alpha and decrease of chin electromyography. All subjects with disconjugated eye movements had also rapid eye movement sleep without atonia and symptoms of rapid eye movement behavior disorder in their past history. Three of them (all children) had post-vaccination narcolepsy. It is not known whether such eye movements are seen in most narcoleptic subjects or whether they are more common in autoimmune/inflammatory narcolepsy with involvement of the structures that coordinate eye movements.

  相似文献   

18.
Control of activity of the diaphragm in rapid-eye-movement sleep   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Respiration in rapid-eye-movement sleep (REMS) is known to be highly variable. The purpose of this study was to investigate the source of this variability and to determine which ordering principles remained operative in REM sleep. In unrestrained, naturally sleeping cats we recorded the electroencephalogram, electrooculogram, neck electromyogram, and diaphragmatic electromyogram (EMG) and computed its moving average (MAdi). As a reference, we first examined MAdi during "tonic" REMS, since breathing is fairly regular in this state. "Control" ranges for peak amplitude (PEMG), inspiratory time (TI), duration of postinspiratory inspiratory activity, expiratory time, and the calculated inspiratory slope (PEMG/TI) were determined by overlaying individual breath traces of the time course of MAdi during tonic REMS to form a composite tracing. Next, the time course of the EMG during individual breaths in slow-wave sleep (SWS) and a complete period of consecutive breaths in REMS (both tonic and phasic) were compared with this tonic REMS composite. The number of eye movements per breath was tabulated as an index of phasic activity. The inspiratory slopes during SWS and tonic REMS were similar. However, during phasic REMS, many breaths displayed either increases (excitation) or decreases (inhibition) in slope compared with the "typical" breaths seen in tonic REMS. The occurrence of these altered slopes increased with the frequency of phasic events. TI was inversely related to the slope of the EMG, which tended to minimize changes in PEMG.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Brief end-expiratory airway occlusions were performed in 22 preterm babies, 17 with and 5 without clinical apnea, and 4 full-term babies, 1 with Pierre-Robin syndrome. Airway stability was evaluated by comparing pressures measured simultaneously in the chest and nasal passages during occluded inspiratory efforts. The airway remained patent throughout all 301 trials in 20 babies during rapid-eye-movement (REM) and quiet sleep. Airway closure occurred during 31/102 trials in 6 babies (5 preterm and 1 term with Pierre-Robin syndrome), more commonly in quiet than in REM sleep. Overall and within individuals, mean closing pressures were significantly lower than the mean maximum falls in airway pressure recorded during occlusions without closure. Mixed-obstructive and obstructive apnea was significantly more frequent in babies with airway closure than in those without (5.3 +/- 4.0 vs. 0.4 +/- 0.8 episodes/h). Pauses in breathing greater than or equal to 3 s occurred during 28% of occlusions in preterm infants and 2% of occlusions in full-term babies. There was no significant difference between the mean frequency of pauses during occlusion and during the preceding control period or in the incidence of pauses in occlusions with vs. those without closure. It is concluded that the airway of most preterm and full-term babies is remarkably stable under load. Intermittent closure occurs in certain infants and may be related to airway muscle dysfunction.  相似文献   

20.
Upper airway dilator activity during sleep appears to be diminished under conditions of enhanced sleep propensity, such as after sleep deprivation, leading to worsening of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep propensity originates in sleep-active neurons of the preoptic area (POA) of the hypothalamus and is facilitated by activation of POA warm-sensitive neurons (WSNs). We hypothesized that activation of WSNs by local POA warming would inhibit activity of the posterior cricoarytenoid (PCA) muscle, an airway dilator, during NREM sleep. In chronically prepared unrestrained cats, the PCA exhibited inspiratory bursts in approximate synchrony with inspiratory diaphragmatic activity during waking, NREM, and REM. Integrated inspiratory PCA activity (IA), peak activity (PA), and the lead time (LT) of the onset of inspiratory activity in PCA relative to diaphragm were significantly reduced in NREM sleep and further reduced during REM sleep compared with waking. Mild bilateral local POA warming (0.5-1.2 degrees C) significantly reduced IA, PA, and LT during NREM sleep compared with a prewarming NREM baseline. In some animals, effects of POA warming on PCA activity were found during waking or REM. Because POA WSN activity is increased during spontaneous NREM sleep and regulates sleep propensity, we hypothesize that this activation contributes to reduction of airway dilator activity in patients with OSA.  相似文献   

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