Publication | Closed Access
Baroreceptors in Preterm Infants: Their Relationship to Maturity and Disease
49
Citations
14
References
1979
Year
HypertensionNeonatologyEducationCongenital Heart AnomalyVascular ToneBlood PressureCongenital Heart DefectEarly Life ExposureCardiologyReflex ControlEarly Childhood DevelopmentNervous SystemPreterm InfantsChild DevelopmentDevelopmental BiologyCardiovascular DiseaseNeuroanatomyPassive TippingPhysiologyPediatricsDevelopmental SciencePreterm BirthMedicine
Using passive tipping to a 45 degrees head-up position, an attempt was made to elicit reflex vasoconstriction in 13 non-distressed preterm infants and 27 infants with hyaline membrane disease, all between 26 and 38 weeks gestation. An increase in vascular tone associated with a significant reduction in peripheral blood-flow was found in 11 of the 13 non-distressed infants, while the same response was lacking in 23 of the 27 distressed infants. No infant demonstrated significant tachycardia with tilting, and the non-distressed infants failed to maintain their mean aortic blood-pressure during tilting. The results suggest that reflex control of vascular tone is present in non-distressed infants as early as 26 weeks gestation, but not in infats with hyaline membrane disease, possibly because of a maximal increase in vascular tone as a response to illness. This is indicated by the findings of significantly higher resting peripheral vascular resistance and lower peripheral blood-flow in infants with this diesease.
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