Effect of spontaneous movement on respiration in preterm infants

7Citations
Citations of this article
16Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

New Findings: What is the central question of this study? The respiratory centres in the brainstem that control respiration receive inputs from various sources, including proprioceptors in muscles and joints and suprapontine centres, which all affect limb movements. What is the effect of spontaneous movement on respiration in preterm infants? What is the main finding and its importance? Apnoeic events tend to be preceded by movements. These activity bursts can cause respiratory instability that leads to an apnoeic event. These findings show promise that infant movements might serve as potential predictors of life-threatening apnoeic episodes, but more research is required. Abstract: A common condition in preterm infants (<37 weeks’ gestational age) is apnoea resulting from immaturity and instability of the respiratory system. As apnoeas are implicated in several acute and long-term complications, prediction of apnoeas may preempt their onset and subsequent complications. This study tests the hypothesis that infant movements are a predictive marker for apnoeic episodes and examines the relation between movement and respiration. Movement was detected using a wavelet algorithm applied to the photoplethysmographic signal. Respiratory activity was measured in nine infants using respiratory inductance plethysmography; in an additional eight infants, respiration and partial pressure of airway carbon dioxide ((Formula presented.)) were measured by a nasal cannula with side-stream capnometry. In the first cohort, the distribution of movements before and after the onset of 370 apnoeic events was compared. Results showed that apnoeic events were associated with longer movement duration occurring before apnoea onsets compared to after. In the second cohort, respiration was analysed in relation to movement, comparing standard deviation of inter-breath intervals (IBI) before and after apnoeas. Poincaré maps of the respiratory activity quantified variability of airway (Formula presented.) in phase space. Movement significantly increased the variability of IBI and (Formula presented.). Moreover, destabilization of respiration was dependent on the duration of movement. These findings support that bodily movements of the infants precede respiratory instability. Further research is warranted to explore the predictive value of movement for life-threatening events, useful for clinical management and risk stratification.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Zuzarte, I., Paydarfar, D., & Sternad, D. (2021). Effect of spontaneous movement on respiration in preterm infants. Experimental Physiology, 106(5), 1285–1302. https://doi.org/10.1113/EP089143

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free