Abstract
ABSTRACT: To study the influence of artificial ventilation rate on neonatal heart rate variability (HRV), ECG and respiratory impedance curves were recorded four times a day in 20 preterm infants (<33 wk) during the first 3 d after birth while the infants were ventilated at a wide range of ventilator rates. The contents of selected frequency bands within the R-R interval power spectrum were calculated for 3-min periods. Respiratory distress syndrome severity was assessed at each measurement. Respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) induced by the ventilator appeared to mimic spontaneous RSA. As in spontaneous respiration, the amount of RSA (power in a frequency band around the respiratory rate) increases as the ventilation rate decreases. This phenomenon is most probably due to entrainment with baroreflex-related fluctuations in the heart rate. Although the artificial ventilation rate influences RSA and thus high-frequency HRV, an increase in respiratory distress syndrome severity results in a decrease in low-frequency HRV. Thus, the attenuation of low-frequency HRV by respiratory distress syndrome is not likely to be due to artificial ventilation.
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Van Ravenswaaij-Arts, C., Hopman, J., Kollée, L. et al. The Influence of Artificial Ventilation on Heart Rate Variability in Very Preterm Infants. Pediatr Res 37, 124–130 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-199501000-00023
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-199501000-00023
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