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Hypoxia and electrocortical activity in the fetal lamb: effects of brainstem transection and chemoreceptor denervation
Authors:O S Bamford  G S Dawes
Institution:Dept. of Pediatrics, University of Maryland Hospital, Baltimore 221201.
Abstract:In order to investigate possible mechanisms for the effect of hypoxia on fetal electrocortical (ECoG) activity, the effects of 30 min of isocapnic hypoxia on ECoG were studied in three groups of unanaesthetized late-gestation fetal lambs in utero. One group was intact, in the second the brainstem was transected between the colliculi, and in the third the carotid sinus nerves and cervical vagosympathetic trunks were cut bilaterally to denervate the systemic arterial chemoreceptors. The incidence of high voltage (HV) ECoG activity was lower in brainstem-transected fetuses than in the other groups. All three groups showed an increased number of changes from low to high voltage and an increase in the incidence of HV activity at the onset of hypoxia, but the increases reached statistical significance only in the brainstem-transected group. It is concluded that the onset of hypoxia is often associated with an increase in HV ECoG activity, with the most consistent changes occurring after brainstem transection and similar but smaller increases in intact and denervated fetuses. Thus the response of fetal electrocortical activity to the onset of hypoxia does not depend on intact connections with the lower brainstem. However, the effect of hypoxia on fetal ECoG is minor and inconsistent and may be physiologically unimportant.
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