Influence of nasal CPAP on cardiorespiratory control in healthy neonate
Author(s) -
Sally Al-Omar,
Virginie Le Rolle,
Patrick Pladys,
Nathalie Samson,
Alfredo Hernández,
Guy Carrault,
JeanPaul Praud
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of applied physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.253
H-Index - 229
eISSN - 8750-7587
pISSN - 1522-1601
DOI - 10.1152/japplphysiol.00994.2018
Subject(s) - cardiorespiratory fitness , continuous positive airway pressure , vagal tone , heart rate , respiratory system , medicine , anesthesia , heart rate variability , expiration , respiratory rate , ventilation (architecture) , cardiology , blood pressure , obstructive sleep apnea , mechanical engineering , engineering
The present study aimed to further unravel the effects of nasal continuous positive airway pressure (nCPAP) on the cardiovascular and respiratory systems in the neonatal period. Six-hour polysomnographic recordings were first performed in seven healthy newborn lambs, aged 2–3 days, without and with nCPAP application at 6 cmH 2 O (nCPAP-6), in randomized order. The effects of nCPAP-6 on heart rate variability, respiratory rate variability, and cardiorespiratory interrelations were analyzed using a semiautomatic signal processing approach applied to ECG and respiration recordings. Thereafter, a cardiorespiratory mathematical model was adapted to the experimental conditions to gain further physiological interpretation and to simulate higher nCPAP levels (8 and 10 cmH 2 O). Results from the signal processing approach suggest that nCPAP-6 applied in newborns with healthy lungs: 1) increases heart rate and decreases the time and frequency domain indices of heart rate variability, especially those representing parasympathetic activity, while increasing the complexity of the RR-interval time series; 2) prolongs the respiratory cycle and expiration duration and decreases respiratory rate variability; and 3) slightly impairs cardiorespiratory interrelations. Model-based analysis revealed that nCPAP-6 increases the heart rate and decreases respiratory sinus arrhythmia amplitude, in association with a reduced parasympathetic efferent activity. These results were accentuated when simulating an increased CPAP level. Overall, our results provide a further understanding of the effects of nCPAP in neonates, in the absence of lung disease. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Application of nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) at 6 cmH 2 O, a level very frequently used in newborns, alters heart and respiratory rate variability, as well as cardiorespiratory interrelations in a full-term newborn model without lung disease. Moreover, whereas nasal CPAP at 6 cmH 2 O decreases parasympathetic efferent activity, there is no change in sympathetic efferent activity.
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