Tracheal fluid in fetal lambs: Spontaneous decrease prior to birth

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Abstract

The authors studied tracheal fluid (TF) production in 14 fetal lambs: 6 controls, 6 receiving atropine on 1 or more of the last 7 days before birth, and 2 with bilateral section of the cervical vagosympathetic trunk. A cannula diverted all TF into an intrauterine bag; TF was collected intermittently and its volume measured. All ewes delivered spontaneously at 128-150 days' gestation. TF production decreased before birth in all fetuses except one control. TF production did not correlate with fetal arterial blood gas tensions, hematocrit, or plasma proteins. In controls only, TF production correlated with fetal arterial pH (P < 0.02); however, the pH range was small and the correlation had questionable physiological significance. For all fetuses, TF production during the 7 days before birth correlated inversely with the plasma cortisol concentration of 48 hr previously (n = 36; r = -0.603; P < 0.001). It is concluded: a) TF production in fetal lambs decreases before spontaneous term or preterm labor; b) this decrease is not affected by atropine or by section of the cervical vagosympathetic trunk; and c) the decrease in TF production may be related to increased secretion of cortisol.

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Kitterman, J. A., Ballard, P. L., Clements, J. A., Mescher, E. J., & Tooley, W. H. (1979). Tracheal fluid in fetal lambs: Spontaneous decrease prior to birth. Journal of Applied Physiology Respiratory Environmental and Exercise Physiology, 47(5), 985–989. https://doi.org/10.1152/jappl.1979.47.5.985

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