Blanco C E, Chen V, Maertzdorf W, Bamford O S, Hanson M
Neonatal Division, Academic Hospital Maastricht, The Netherlands.
J Dev Physiol. 1990 Oct;14(4):235-41.
Hypoxia inhibits fetal breathing movements but after birth it stimulates breathing. These differences have long been thought to involve central nervous inhibitory mechanisms. Such mechanisms might exert a tonic inhibition of fetal breathing movements at normal fetal PaO2 and the rise in PaO2 at birth might lift this inhibitory effect. To test this hypothesis 7 fetal sheep were chronically instrumented at 125-130 days for recording electrocortical activity (ECoG), and the electromyograph (EMG) activity of the diaphragm and neck muscles. Catheters were placed in a fetal carotid and a brachial artery and in the fetal trachea. For an extracorporeal membrane oxygenation system a 12 F gauge silastic catheter was placed in the right atrium for draining fetal blood and a 9.6 F gauge catheter was placed in a carotid artery to return oxygenated blood. Three days after operation the fetuses were connected to the extracorporeal membrane oxygenation system and fetal PaO2 was raised to 65.2 +/- 4.4 mmHg (SEM) for 6 to 19 h without changing pH or PaCO2. Neither the incidence of high voltage ECoG (48.5 +/- SEM 2.0% vs 52.8 +/- 3.3%) nor of fetal breathing movements (37.3 +/- 2.6% vs 23.8 +/- 5.9%) changed during the periods of hyperoxia. Since fetal breathing movements did not become continuous, we conclude that the lower PaO2 in the fetus compared to the neonate does not exert a tonic inhibitory influence on fetal breathing movements.