Veille J C, Penry M
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Bowman Gray School of Medicine of Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC 27157.
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 1992 Dec;167(6):1668-71. doi: 10.1016/0002-9378(92)91759-4.
The null hypothesis is that umbilical, middle cerebral, and renal artery pulsed Doppler velocity waveforms in the normal term fetus may be affected during short-term maternal inhalation of 3% carbon dioxide gas mixture.
Seventy-two observations were made on 14 term fetuses before and during maternal 3% carbon dioxide gas mixture inhalation. The umbilical, middle cerebral, and renal arteries of these fetuses were sampled with pulsed Doppler velocity waveforms and recorded on a strip chart at a preset speed of 50 mm/sec. Doppler waveforms were analyzed for differences in the systolic peak to end-diastolic velocity ratio for these three vascular beds. Peak flow velocity and time velocity integral were also analyzed for the cerebral and renal vascular beds. The data were analyzed with the paired t test.
A significant decrease in the systolic-to-diastolic-velocity ratio of the middle cerebral artery occurred with 3% carbon dioxide inhalation (p < 0.02). The other vascular beds had no demonstrable change.
Transient maternal breathing of 3% carbon dioxide gas mixture selectively causes a decrease in resistance in the fetal cerebral circulation.