Mohr Mary A, Vergales Brooke D, Lee Hoshik, Clark Matthew T, Lake Douglas E, Mennen Anne C, Kattwinkel John, Sinkin Robert A, Moorman J Randall, Fairchild Karen D, Delos John B
Department of Physics, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia;
Department of Pediatrics (Neonatology), University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia;
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2015 Mar 1;118(5):558-68. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00144.2014. Epub 2014 Dec 30.
Apnea is nearly universal among very low birth weight (VLBW) infants, and the associated bradycardia and desaturation may have detrimental consequences. We describe here very long (>60 s) central apnea events (VLAs) with bradycardia and desaturation, discovered using a computerized detection system applied to our database of over 100 infant years of electronic signals. Eighty-six VLAs occurred in 29 out of 335 VLBW infants. Eighteen of the 29 infants had a clinical event or condition possibly related to the VLA. Most VLAs occurred while infants were on nasal continuous positive airway pressure, supplemental oxygen, and caffeine. Apnea alarms on the bedside monitor activated in 66% of events, on average 28 s after cessation of breathing. Bradycardia alarms activated late, on average 64 s after cessation of breathing. Before VLAs oxygen saturation was unusually high, and during VLAs oxygen saturation and heart rate fell unusually slowly. We give measures of the relative severity of VLAs and theoretical calculations that describe the rate of decrease of oxygen saturation. A clinical conclusion is that very long apnea (VLA) events with bradycardia and desaturation are not rare. Apnea alarms failed to activate for about one-third of VLAs. It appears that neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) personnel respond quickly to bradycardia alarms but not consistently to apnea alarms. We speculate that more reliable apnea detection systems would improve patient safety in the NICU. A physiological conclusion is that the slow decrease of oxygen saturation is consistent with a physiological model based on assumed high values of initial oxygen saturation.
呼吸暂停在极低出生体重(VLBW)婴儿中几乎普遍存在,与之相关的心动过缓和血氧饱和度下降可能会产生有害后果。我们在此描述伴有心动过缓和血氧饱和度下降的极长(>60秒)中枢性呼吸暂停事件(VLA),这些事件是通过应用于我们超过100个婴儿年电子信号数据库的计算机检测系统发现的。335名VLBW婴儿中有29名发生了86次VLA。29名婴儿中有18名出现了可能与VLA相关的临床事件或病症。大多数VLA发生在婴儿接受鼻持续气道正压通气、补充氧气和咖啡因治疗期间。床边监护仪的呼吸暂停警报在66%的事件中被触发,平均在呼吸停止后28秒。心动过缓警报触发较晚,平均在呼吸停止后64秒。在VLA之前,血氧饱和度异常高,而在VLA期间,血氧饱和度和心率下降异常缓慢。我们给出了VLA相对严重程度的测量值以及描述血氧饱和度下降速率的理论计算。临床结论是,伴有心动过缓和血氧饱和度下降的极长呼吸暂停(VLA)事件并不罕见。约三分之一的VLA事件中呼吸暂停警报未能触发。新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)人员似乎对心动过缓警报反应迅速,但对呼吸暂停警报的反应并不一致。我们推测,更可靠的呼吸暂停检测系统将提高NICU中的患者安全性。生理结论是,血氧饱和度的缓慢下降与基于假定高初始血氧饱和度值的生理模型一致。